Are We Sure We Want to Give Trump War Powers? – The New York Times

Everything about the coronavirus crisis looks and feels like a war that is all the more unsettling because the enemy is invisible and immune to brute force. Yet amid all the signs of conflict declarations of emergency, mobilizations of National Guard troops, the exercise of extraordinary powers there is enduring constitutional danger in treating this crisis like a war. When this pandemic is over, generations will have to deal both with its terrible human toll and with the constitutional changes it yields.

Wars transform political systems, often in ways that are difficult to reverse. So do major crises. Even as Americans understandably focus their attention on the dire public health emergency the nation faces, they should allot some consideration to the effect of our response on the nations constitutional fabric. The political system that emerges from this pandemic is almost certain to concentrate more power perhaps power of an acutely intimate nature, the kind that decides personal matters of life and death in the national government generally and in the president specifically.

This particular crisis, which requires prolonged attention to detail and the magnanimity to set personal and partisan grievances aside, does not play to President Trumps strengths. His propensity for short-term thinking was evident in his preposterous suggestion Tuesday that, against all the available evidence about public health, he wanted the country opened up, and just raring to go, by Easter. But in constitutional terms, his own personal capacity to rise to this moment is less important than whether the nation should want a lasting concentration of more power in executive hands. Even if Mr. Trump were better suited to the moment, that would not mean future presidents should have more power.

War, James Madison wrote, is in fact the true nurse of executive aggrandizement. That has been true of nearly every war the nation has fought. In many cases, emergency powers have been temporarily necessary but permanently transformational. Madisons warning holds for war metaphors as well. The nations wars on poverty, drugs and other problems have all concentrated power in the federal government and the men we have chosen to lead it. Presidents who, as Madison noted, wield the power and wear the laurels of war have an incentive to encourage this.

Mr. Trump has already declared himself a wartime president. That is unsurprising. What is more troubling is the eagerness of legislators for him to act that way.

Recent weeks have witnessed a curious constitutional inversion: legislators eager to surrender power to a president reluctant to wield it. This was perhaps most evident in the crisis posture of Chuck Schumer, the Senates Democratic leader. He repeatedly pressed Mr. Trump to declare a national emergency under the disaster-related Stafford Act only to release a statement after it happened urging the chief magistrate not to indulge his autocratic tendencies. If Mr. Schumer was concerned about those tendencies, why was he so eager to give Mr. Trump more power? That power may have been justified, at least temporarily. Emergency powers often are. The problem is that they accumulate and endure long after the emergency ends.

The constitutional system of separation of powers was not designed to work with the legislature heaping power on the president and then pleading with him not to abuse it. Federalist 51 famously described a mechanism by which competing ambitions to exercise power would keep each branch from encroaching on the other.

There is an excellent argument to be made that this crisis requires an unusual degree of presidential authority, regardless of whether one wishes a different president could wield it. It is understandably difficult to look beyond the crisis now, but constitutional questions must be considered without regard to the temporary occupant of any office. Whoever is president, the key is that additional powers conferred on the executive be given only temporarily, with Congress holding the leash.

That is the inverse of how this crisis has unfolded. Having been pressured to declare a national emergency, Mr. Trump unsurprisingly swung for the constitutional fences. He declared an emergency not only under the Stafford Act which releases disaster-relief funds but also under the National Emergencies Act, which could trigger dozens of statutory provisions, many of which do not bear on this crisis.

What is particularly disturbing about this procedure is that the National Emergencies Act effectually empowers presidents to retain emergency authority until they decide to give it up. An emergency declaration can be renewed by the president and terminated only by a joint resolution of Congress that requires the presidents signature. The expectation that presidents will voluntarily renounce emergency authority runs contrary to all assumptions the constitutional order makes about the seductions of power, which, as Federalist 48 noted, is of an encroaching nature.

It is especially disturbing that Mr. Trump was goaded into invoking the Korean War-era Defense Production Act, which enables presidents to direct industrial production toward war needs when national security or natural disaster requires it. The fact that the act has been amended to apply to domestic emergencies underscores the tendency of emergency powers to expand. What about Mr. Trumps erratic response to the coronavirus pandemic thus far from his early flattering of China to his repetitive efforts to minimize the crisis inspires confidence in his ability to command the industrial capacity of the nation?

Even if one granted the defensible premise that the national government needs to do more to force industry to produce emergency medical supplies, equating domestic crisis with foreign war is dangerous. War powers are notoriously difficult to contain once unleashed. They tend, instead, to metastasize, as in a recent Justice Department request to allow indefinite detention without trial during emergencies. More broadly, crisis powers tend to remain in presidential hands once the immediate danger passes, especially when wars do not have clear beginnings and ends.

Witness the fact that the post-9/11 Authorization for Use of Military Force remains in effect nearly 19 years later. Americans born after it was enacted will be eligible to vote in the next election. They are also serving in the seemingly endless conflicts that have ensued. In the case of 9/11, the preoccupation was with emergency action at all costs. We are still grappling with the constitutional fallout a generation later.

The coronavirus crisis could prove even more insidious. Mr. Trumps use of the National Emergencies Act to help fund his border wall shows how tempting that kind of power can be. If war statutes are converted to domestic use, Democrats might consider what will happen if Mr. Trump who has already likened illegal immigrants to invaders declares a metaphorical war on them.

Similarly, Republicans should survey the powers being conferred on Mr. Trump and ask whether they would be comfortable with Joseph R. Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee, for president, invoking national security powers for urgent wars that address his priorities, like climate change or gun control. It may be a far leap from here to there. It is also now a shorter one.

None of these is equivalent to the genuine and immediate crisis the coronavirus presents. But all of them serve as warnings that the powers will not easily go away when this crisis ends. Far from it: We risk becoming inured to them and legitimating their future use.

These scenarios are all the more disconcerting for being so preventable. Congress has shown in recent days that it has the capacity to act in times of crisis. It overwhelmingly passed an initial round of emergency measures, which Mr. Trump promptly signed into law.

It is true that the economic bailout was delayed by disagreement on the proper extent of government authority and the responsibilities of corporations that receive public money. But now above all times, and with $2 trillion at stake, that was a debate worth having.

Instead of bending wartime statutes to domestic use or activating emergency statutes laced throughout the federal code, Congress could have identified the specific powers Mr. Trump needed to deal with this crisis and conferred them on a temporary and renewable basis. That would have left it up to Congress, not the president, to decide how long these exceptional executive powers were available.

It is difficult to make room for constitutional considerations while a pandemic is sweeping the nation and overwhelming health systems. But this is when those considerations matter most, because they establish precedents that do not end with the crises that produce them.

Crisis both necessitates constitutional protections and tests our willingness to adhere to them. Perhaps the coronavirus crisis is an opportunity to show that another element of the constitutional system the citizenrys willingness to consider constitutional questions even when they seem remote from immediate emergencies is resilient too.

Greg Weiner (@GregWeiner1) is a political scientist at Assumption College, a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and the author of The Political Constitution: The Case Against Judicial Supremacy.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. Wed like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And heres our email: letters@nytimes.com.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

View post:

Are We Sure We Want to Give Trump War Powers? - The New York Times

The War on Coronavirus Advances on Five Different Fronts – National Review

A medical officer checks devices at an emergency hospital, handling coronavirus disease in Jakarta, Indonesia March 23, 2020. (Antara Foto, Hafidz Mubarak/Reuters via Indonesia Out)

Today on the menu: the different forms the world is utilizing to battle the coronavirus, from massively stepping up respirator production to creating treatments for those with the virus.

The Five Fronts

Theres no getting around it: The news is grim, and its going to be grim for a while. You can choose whatever metaphor you like; I prefer to describe this as the coronavirus bombing Pearl Harbor and leaving our medical Pacific Fleet in ruins. We never sought this fight and most of us were oblivious to the threat as it gathered. Now, after suffering our first shocking losses, we know we have no choice but to fight this lethal enemy. We dont know how long this fight is going to last. We know we are certain to suffer casualties. But we have no choice but to fight this virus with everything weve got; unchecked coronavirus would not destroy America, but it would inflict unbearable losses and alter it irrevocably.

Perhaps it is worth remembering Winston Churchill, May 13, 1940:

I would say to the House, as I said to those who have joined this government: I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat.

We have before us an ordeal of the most grievous kind. We have before us many, many long months of struggle and of suffering. You ask, what is our policy? I can say: It is to wage war, by sea, land and air, with all our might and with all the strength that God can give us; to wage war against a monstrous tyranny, never surpassed in the dark, lamentable catalogue of human crime. That is our policy. You ask, what is our aim? I can answer in one word: It is victory, victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory, however long and hard the road may be; for without victory, there is no survival.

A plan for final victory is already taking shape. The United States of America, and the rest of the world, are attacking this threat on five key fronts.

Discovering and developing the vaccine.

Coronavirus is probably going to be a factor in our lives until late 2021. This doesnt mean the current conditions will continue for another 18 months, just that we need to be prepared for the discovery, manufacturing, and distribution of a vaccine to take that long.

Yes, it is possible we could get lucky and the vaccine will be widely available before then. You probably saw the news of the first experimental vaccine trials that began last month. The good news is that at least 44 different projects to develop a vaccine are in development around the world. There are probably more great medical minds, with more resources and equipment and funding, attacking the coronavirus than have ever been thrown at any health problem ever before in human history.

(The Chinese government claims it will have a vaccine by April for emergency situations. But we all know China lies.)

Stanley Plotkin invented the rubella vaccine in 1964. He told Science magazine, There may be advantages to having more than one anticoronavirus vaccine because if and its a big if one needs millions of doses, asking a single manufacturer to produce enough for the world is unlikely. One is going to need multiple manufacturers and if there are multiple effective vaccines so much the better. I am not arguing for the selection of a single coronavirus vaccine unless there are difficulties with others.

Expanding hospital capacity.

Youve been hearing about flattening the curve, in an attempt to keep the number of cases below the threshold of the medical systems ability to treat everyone. Theres a horizontal line on the chart used to visualize this that represents medical system capacity. But that line doesnt have to remain flat. The right moves can increase the capacity of our medical system.

Seattle already has two hospital tents on soccer fields.

In New York, theyre starting:

Four 250-bed federal emergency hospitals will be built in the Javits Center over the next 7 to 10 days.

The hospitalsare being built by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Construction material for the hospitals had already started to arrive as Cuomo spoke. Each of the hospitals will be 40,000 square feet and be staffed by 320 federal staff members.

Cuomo also said 30,000 retired healthcare workers are answering the call and have enlisted to help in New Yorks coronavirus response.

All across the country, local and state leaders are looking at closed hospital facilities and either reopening them or preparing to reopen them.

Philadelphia is contemplating reopening Hahnemann University Hospital. In California, Long Beach Community Hospital is reopening. In New York, DeGraff Memorial Hospital in North Tonawanda may reopen. The New Jersey Department of Health is working to re-open Inspira Medical Center Woodbury in Gloucester County. This country has 155 closed rural hospitals.

Each one of those adds a couple hundred more beds and capacity to handle non-coronavirus health care that cannot be delayed.

Making more masks.

Mask production is expanding: 3M has ramped up production of N95 respirators and doubled its global output to nearly 100 million per month; in the United States we are producing 35 million respirators per month. Fiat Chrysler will start manufacturing face masks in the coming weeks and expects to be able to create 1 million per month. (One unnerving detail: The automaker confirmed to TechCrunch that production capacity is being installed this week at one of its factories in China.)

Those homemade ones might help somewhat, but they are not really a suitable substitute for health-care workers and others likely to be exposed to the coronavirus.

Making more ventilators.

Americas auto-making factories to the rescue!

Ford said it will work with3M to produce a new kind of Powered Air-Purifying Respirator for healthcare workers. A PAPR has a clear mask that fits over the face. Air is drawn in through a tube connected to a pump that filters the air. The PAPR will be made using parts from both Ford and 3M, the automaker said, including fans used in the Ford F-150s optional ventilated seats.

Fordsaid it is exploring the possibility of producing the device at one of its Michigan factories. 3M will also make the respirators at its own factory, Ford said.

The automaker also said it will work with the United Auto Workers Union to assemble clear plastic face shields that protect people from possibly infectious bodily fluids. The Ford-designed masks are being tested at Detroit-area hospitals. They could be used by healthcare workers, but also others, such as store clerks, who must regularly deal with the public.

Ford is also using 3D printers at its Advanced Manufacturing Center to create disposable air-filtering respirator masks. Once approved, Ford said, the company could initially 1,000 masks per month but hopes to increase production as quickly as possible.

Finally, something that might make that GM bailout worthwhile:

General Motors said last Friday that it was going to work with Ventec Life Systems to help increase its production of ventilators for hospital patients. On Monday, the two companies announced that Ventec is now planning exponentially higher ventilator production as fast as possible as a result of the partnership.

Also notice this detail from a March 22 announcement from Food and Drug Administration, which suggests that one possible solution is on the bedside tables of millions of Americans.

Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP), auto-CPAP, and bilevel positive airway pressure (BiPAP or BPAP) machines typically used for treatment of sleep apnea (either in the home or facility setting) may be used to support patients with respiratory insufficiency provided appropriate monitoring (as available) and patient condition.

Its hard to get a sense of how many CPAP machines are out there, but one manufacturer, ResMed, said in 2018 it had millions of patients. One company estimates 5 million Americans use CPAP machines.

Making more treatments for those who have coronavirus.

I cant believe I have to say this, but do not eat fish tank cleaner to prevent coronavirus.

Right now, the Food and Drug Administration is investigating two drugs that are approved to treat other diseases (chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine) and another, more experimental drug (remdesivir). Around the world, 40 studies for coronavirus drugs have begun but are not yet recruiting for clinical trials and 49 are recruiting.

With progress on these five fronts, we can gradually lift the social distancing, shelter-in-place, lockdowns, and those loosely enforced curfews. In time, as the country adjusts, state and local governments will reevaluate whether all of these restrictions makes sense for every area. For example, right now, California is in lockdown, meaning everyone is expected to stay home except to get food, care for a relative or friend, obtain health care or go to an essential job. But as of this writing, 16 counties have no reported cases (mostly rural ones).

ADDENDUM: Thank you to Michael Brendan Dougherty for the kind words on the most recent edition of The Editors, and thanks to Kevin Holtsberry for his high praise as well.

See original here:

The War on Coronavirus Advances on Five Different Fronts - National Review

Congress at war over third coronavirus package – Politico

With help from David Lim

House and Senate divided on coronavirus drug payments and testing requirements.

Advertisement

New York begins trials for two potential treatments, heralded by Trump.

Gileads antiviral gets a rare disease nod ensuring 7 years of market exclusivity.

Happy Tuesday and welcome back to Prescription Pulse! Do you work for a hospital? What's the status of your personal protective gear? Is your hospital able to perform its own testing? Tell us what you're seeing. This survey is for our reporting only. We wont publish your name without contacting you for permission. And keep sending pharma/device news and tips Sarah Owermohle ([emailprotected] or @owermohle), David Lim ([emailprotected] or @davidalim) and Arthur Allen ([emailprotected] or @ArthurAllen202).

Sign up for POLITICO Nightly: Coronavirus Special Edition, your daily update on how the illness is affecting politics, markets, public health and more.

CONGRESS AT WAR OVER THIRD CORONAVIRUS PACKAGE A new rescue plan from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi would, among other things, require insurers to eliminate co-pays on coronavirus treatments and bolster test reporting.

While Pelosi's draft bill has no chance of being enacted, it provides a laundry list of the kind of measures Democrats are pushing as talks over a historic stimulus package hit a rough patch in the Senate. Heres how the Senate Republican plan and Pelosis differ on pharma and devices:

Paying for drugs. While health plans would have to fully cover coronavirus treatments at no extra expense, theyd be reimbursed for their patients cost-sharing. But in addition to waiving treatment costs, Pelosis bill also orders plans to leave out certain barriers to accessing medicines, like prior authorization requirements, that could slow down use of coronavirus-targeting drugs.

House Democrats had struggled to get drug affordability language into the first stimulus package in the face of GOP opposition. The Senate version shields patients from out-of-pocket payments for tests but does not make the same assurances for medicines. Nothings been approved for Covid-19 yet, so its unclear what the bill for treatment would even be.

Tracking tests. The House bill would require states and local governments, labs and health systems to report real-time data coronavirus testing results. Democrats also want specific details from severe outcomes to be reported a step public health researchers say is needed to have a better understanding of how the disease is affecting different patient populations.

It is unclear if the House bill provides $5 billion in funding that commercial labs have sought. The Senate version did not contain such money, much to chagrin of groups like the American Clinical Laboratories Association.

ANTIBIOTIC MEASURE DROPPED FROM SENATE VERSION Meanwhile, a provision to boost payments for much-needed antibiotics has been dropped from the Senate GOP stimulus package, aides and lobbyists confirm. A corresponding measure was not in the House bill.

Conversations are ongoing, but its looking pretty grim, said one policy expert close to negotiations. The provision, drawn from the bipartisan DISARM Act, S. 1712 (116), would have boosted Medicare payments for antibiotics.

Proponents of the measure say its not just about bolstering the beleaguered antibiotic industry, which has been wracked by bankruptcies and mergers. The ongoing pandemic is about a virus but many people who contract a virus actually end up dying from secondary infections, especially if they are in the hospital on a ventilator that can be susceptible to bacteria, argued the policy expert.

Is that the case with coronavirus? Too early to say, the experts say. But a few research papers are starting to give us that smoke.

TRUMP TOUTS NY TRIALS President Donald Trump is hanging big hopes for defeating the coronavirus on a drug trial starting soon in New York, touting the potential benefits of an experimental combination that is only in the early stages of research.

That therapy probably is looking very, very good, and the trial could start as early as Tuesday, Trump said at a Monday night press briefing on the coronavirus.

Two clinical trials are set to begin in the state as early as this week, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Monday morning ahead of the president's briefing.

Cuomo and Trump have clashed in recent weeks over the federal response to the pandemic and states needs, but Trump on Monday pointed to New Yorks upcoming trials as evidence that swift progress was being made against the virus that has infected nearly 40,000 people in the country so far. New York, now considered the U.S. epicenter of the outbreak, has reported nearly 21,000 known cases.

We are dealing there well together, Trump said of Cuomo on Monday night, later adding that the governor has been working very hard."

One trial would combine the antibiotic zithromax and the decades-old drug hydroxychloroquine, originally developed to fight malaria. The president has named-checked the drug in recent press conferences as a promising option for treating patients who contract the virus, despite research being in the early stages.

Bioethicists and policy experts have warned against overpromising on chloroquine, which is also used against lupus and arthritis, because it's not yet clear how effective it is against the coronavirus and its side effects could be serious.

The second trial could begin as early as this week to test infusing a serum from recovered Covid-19 patients into current patients to boost their immunity to the virus, Cuomo said.

The plasma technique, first used in the 1890s, is still occasionally employed in critical situations Chinese scientists have used it in the current pandemic as well. But it has had a mixed record: In a trial using plasma against the Ebola virus, 31 percent of participants died, compared to 38 percent who died while receiving only supportive care, with researchers reporting that the technique "was not associated with a significant improvement in survival."

CORONAVIRUS A RARE DISEASE? Apparently so, according to an FDA decision Monday to designate Gileads experimental antiviral remdesivir an orphan drug. The designation gives Gilead seven years of market exclusivity and a 25 percent tax credit if it makes it to market. But Covid-19 has already infected 375,000 people worldwide and at least 39,000 people in the U.S., with no signs yet of abating. Some governors have warned that 40 percent to 60 percent of people could be infected if certain measures are not taken hardly the definition of rare.

The designation, in fact, does not take projected figures into account so even though public health experts expect many more domestic cases, coronavirus is still a rare disease, for now. And the FDA cannot rescind the designation just because case load grows over 200,000, its benchmark for the classification.

The intellectual property NGO Knowledge Ecology International quickly slammed the decision. "Everyone wishes this was a rare disease, but unfortunately, it isnt, and the testing will certainly confirm that shortly," the organization wrote in a statement.

House Democrats also might not be thrilled. The House Committee on Oversight and Reform last year grilled Gilead CEO Daniel ODay over the drugmakers patents and prices for HIV medicines. Some argued that the government should ignore the exclusivity on patents on a prevention drug, Truvada, that they said federally funded scientists at the CDC had a role in developing.

INSULIN GOES BIOLOGIC Grandfathered biologic drugs officially transitioned to a new regulatory pathway on Monday, a move aimed at opening the door to more affordable insulin as well as certain fertility drugs, human growth hormone and other substances.

New versions of insulin will now be classed with vaccines and therapeutic proteins and can be fast-tracked when shown to be similar to or interchangeable with FDA-approved biologics. There is no true generic insulin on the market now, partly because the conventional pathway made it difficult to make identical products.

FDA published a final rule Feb. 20 outlining the application process for the new pathway for biological products. In a release Monday, FDA deputy commissioner Amy Abernethy and drugs chief Janet Woodcock called it a historic day and a landmark moment.

FDA IS WARNING CONSUMERS ABOUT FAKE TESTS The agency says that while it is working with developers on coronavirus tests that may include at-home sample collection, there is no FDA-approved at-home test to date, and consumers should be wary of any product making such a representation.

Fraudulent health claims, tests, and products can pose serious health risks, FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn said in a statement Friday.

PUBLIC HEALTH LABS GET SWAB REFRESH The labs are receiving more than 200,000 swabs from the Strategic National Stockpile in response to a supply crunch for basic testing materials, Scott Becker, the CEO of the Association of Public Health Laboratories, told POLITICO on Sunday.

A backlog of samples to be tested for coronavirus at commercial labs will be resolved by mid-week, Vice President Mike Pence told reporters Sunday.

Pence also said the administration would give all commercial labs guidance to prioritize in-patient testing, so that patients who have been checked into hospitals for the coronavirus or coronavirus-like symptoms could be tested more quickly.

MEETING THE VENTILATOR DEMAND CPAP devices can be converted into ventilators during the coronavirus outbreak, FDA said in guidance over the weekend.

The policy allows hospitals to repurpose existing products to meet major shortages in the United States during the coronavirus outbreak.

ResMed Chief Medical Officer Carlos Nunez told POLITICO that modifications to its in-market CPAP machines to support more advanced modes of respiratory aid requires careful assessment to ensure risk is acceptable.

We have an opportunity to convert the manufacturing resources typically used for PAP devices to support manufacturing bilevel and non-invasive ventilation devices that are more suited to the care of COVID-19 patients, Nunez said. The company is in the process of doubling its normal manufacturing levels for invasive-capable and non-invasive ventilators.

Ventilators normally used in other environments, such as ambulances, could be used for long-term care, the guidance says.

Still, groups including the American Hospital Association and state leaders like Cuomo argue the federal governments actions are inadequate and that Trump should use the Defense Production Act to compel manufacturers to boost supply of ventilators, personal protective equipment and testing supplies.

We cant just wait for companies to come forward with offers and hope they will, Cuomo tweeted Monday. This is a national emergency.

HOW DO YOU DOLE OUT IN A PANDEMIC? Two articles in the New England Journal of Medicine on Monday examine the question of how to ethically allocate scarce medical resources and ventilators during the coronavirus pandemic.

Rationing is already here. In the United States, perhaps the earliest example was the near-immediate recognition that there were not enough high-filtration N-95 masks for health care workers, prompting contingency guidance on how to reuse masks designed for single use, the medical ethicists wrote. They also note that hard decisions about which patients get intensive care beds and ventilators during a severe outbreak are on the horizon.

STATES STRATEGIZE ON TESTING New York is shifting its remote testing away from worried well residents and New Yorkers experiencing mild Covid-19 symptoms to prioritize the sick, the de Blasio administration said Sunday. The city canceled a remote testing site at Pier 88 the same day and shut down one of the public hospital systems sites in the Bronx on Monday, Amanda Eisenberg reports.

Meanwhile, Mayor Bill de Blasio said that NYC Health + Hospitals is about 10 days away from reaching its capacity for Covid-19 patients. He also warned of looming equipment shortages.

I think were about 10 days away now from seeing widespread shortages of really fundamental supplies, from ventilators, surgical masks the things that are absolutely necessary to keep a hospital system running, de Blasio said during an interview on CNN. And we have seen next to nothing from the federal government at this point.

Meanwhile in Florida, a small battalion of University of Florida researchers will be at The Villages, a sprawling retirement community north of Orlando, where they will administer 400 to 500 coronavirus tests daily to eldery patients even asymptomatic Gov. Ron DeSantis said Monday.

ANGRY STATE LEADERS PUSH BACK ON MASK SHIPMENT CLAIMS Governors, mayors and front-line health care workers confronting rising numbers of critically ill coronavirus patients said Sunday they have not received meaningful amounts of federal aid including the shipments of desperately needed masks and other emergency equipment that administration officials say they have already dispatched.

Several Democratic governors are demanding a more coordinated national response to get supplies as fast as possible to where they are needed most critically, Alice Miranda Ollstein reported. But Trump hit back at the governors' televised pleas, tweeting Sunday that they "shouldn't be blaming the Federal Government for their own shortcomings." He told the governors the federal government's role is to be there "to back you up should you fail, and always will be!"

HHS OIG put out a fraud alert Monday warning the public of coronavirus schemes like telemarketing calls seeking personal details such as Medicare information.

More:

Congress at war over third coronavirus package - Politico

Bandsintown Announces Twitch-hosted LIVE Music Marathon Featuring Amanda Palmer, Sofi Tukker, Tank and the Bangas and More – mxdwn.com

Aaron Grech March 25th, 2020 - 11:52 AM

The music events platform Bandsintown will be hosting a LIVE Music Marathon on their Twitch channel, which will host a variety of performances from artists such asTaking Back Sunday, Amanda Palmer, Tank & The Bangas, Yuksek, 99 Neighbors, Sofi Tukker, Matt Quinn of Mt. Joy and Tayla Parx. This livestream will be in support of theRecording Academy and Musicares recently announced COVID-19 relief fund.

We are experiencing a new form of connectivity between music acts and their fans, says Bandsintown Managing Partner Fabrice Sergent. Artists have suddenly become more approachable. A new form of entertainment is emerging from this chaos.

This event will take place across two days, from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. E.T. on March 26th and March 27th. Palmer and Tasking Back Sunday are currently scheduled for the first day of this marathon, while Tukker andTank and the Bangas will be performing the next day. A full schedule of the events can be found here.

Watch live video from Bandsintown on http://www.twitch.tvOther prominent musicians have also been hosting livestreams in support of COVID-19 relief. Rock performer Courtney Barnett and indie pop outfit Lucius recently held a marathon stream featuringThe War on Drugs, Sharon Van Etten, Kurt Vile, Kevin Morby & Katie Crutchfield, Fred Armisen, Sheryl Crow, Bedouine, Nathaniel Rateliff, Emily King, and Lukas Nelson.

Palmer recently releasedAmanda Palmer & Friends Present Forty-Five Degrees: A Bushfire Charity Flash Record, in support of relief efforts for the Australian bushfires. Tukker recently released a music video for her song Ringless.

Schedule:

Thursday:

Hala 10 AM PSTFly by Midnight 11 AM PSTThe Mowglis 12 AM PSTMt. Joy (solo) 1 PM PSTPLS&TY 1:30 PM PSTmxmtoon 2 PM PSTAmanda Palmer 3 PM PSTTaking Back Sunday 4 PM PSTYuksek 5 PM PST

Photo Credit: Raymond Flotat

Read this article:

Bandsintown Announces Twitch-hosted LIVE Music Marathon Featuring Amanda Palmer, Sofi Tukker, Tank and the Bangas and More - mxdwn.com

2020 vision: What should the Twin Cities look like tomorrow? – City Pages

We published the results in our first issue of the year 2000, at a time when people were looking forward to the start of a new millennium, and the responses ranged from fun and flippant to rigorous and wonky. (You can read that original feature here. You can find out whether some of those wishes came true here.)

But 2000 was a long time ago. It was before 9/11, the war on terror, the Great Recession, the first African-American president, and the vicious resurgence of white nationalism. And locally, the Twin Cities had yet to construct a failed mall at Block E and numerous (yet-unfailed) sports stadiums, or witness the rise of a vibrant restaurant culture. Prince was very much alive. The future those people were asked to imagine? Were living in it.

That got us wondering how people would answer the same question today. And so we asked. Artists and politicians, historians and poets, comedians and restaurateurswe wanted to hear from them all.

And then... well, the future took an unexpected turn. As you read these answers, remember that we received them before we found ourselves in a national health crisis whose effects could reshape how we live at a fundamental level. Nobody can predict how the Twin Citiesor Minnesota, or the U.S., or the worldwill change as a result.

Then again, who can ever predict how things will change? Whatever happens in the upcoming months, however disruptive, there will be a future. And if we have to rebuild, here are some ideas for the planners of tomorrow to kick around. Keith Harris

Getty Images/iStockphoto

Chad Kampeevent promoter, Flip Phone

I know people from St. Paul wont like this, but the big thing I would love to see would be Minneapolis and St. Paul becoming one large city together to create a dynamic cultural landscape. This would make it easier for everyone to get to the cities shared resources, to get out of that mentality of Im going from one city to another. If I could just snap my fingers, there would be just one major downtowntheyre so far from each other now that people who live in one never go to the other.

Dayna FrankPresident and CEO, First Avenue Productions

Minneapolis-St. Paul needs to continue working on improving the quality of life for every single resident. We top a ton of stunning lists, and we should, but we cant ignore the lists on which we place last. The Twin Cities needs to work for all residents. We need to improve access to steady and meaningful employment, to transportation and to affordable housing, while we focus on improving equitable access to things that bring us joy, like our parks, lakes, and our brilliant entertainment scene.

That and a Twins World Series victory would be nice.

Todd KemeryVice President, Paralyzed Veterans of America, Minnesota Chapter

As a quadriplegic and a wheelchair user, if I had the power to prioritize anything, it would be snow removal at all curb cuts and draining any water or slush in front of them. Piles of snow and slush obviously block the path of travel of those with mobility issues, but what is often not considered is proper drainage. When I encounter any standing water or slush, my ability to see the surface is gone. I cant see any hidden trip hazard, and if I trip or get seriously stuck on an extremely cold day, theres the potential for frostbite or worse. Having a spinal cord injury/disorder or any neuromuscular condition that results in limited or missing muscle control means cold and muscle groups begin to stiffen after five to ten minutes. The danger then becomes the inability to push or control a wheelchair or to transfer in or out of a vehicle, transfer in or out of a wheelchair, or to open doors and push buttons. Tragic results can escalate quickly if someone is stuck out of doors and cant use their hands or arms.

Hodan HassanMinnesota state representative, District 62A

I would love to see the opioid epidemic combatted. I hope members of our community are not dying of overdose or committing suicide because we dont have comprehensive mental healthcare. Opioids are an acute problem in my districtif you walk around in the Franklin Avenue and Bloomington Avenue area, you can see syringes everywhere. We need to fund the problem appropriatelylast session we did get $40 million from big pharma, but I think we already know what the problem is. Many of the communities struggling with opioids have huge historical trauma, of poverty, racism, discrimination. Being homeless is hard, poverty is hard, and its expensive to be poor, so people are finding ways to deal with their pain.

Kim Bartmannrestaurateur

Twenty years ago [when I responded to this same question], I was an angry tree-hugger, despondent about the potential bulldozing of the Camp Coldwater Spring, and yes, selfishly, my long-time spot for walking with friends and dogs along the river and in the woods. Now Im what Id like to call a tree-hugger with stats, having built LEED-certified projects and engaged in sustainable business practices for 20 years. Yes, Im still angry about some of our MnDot decisions, like the one where a train could have been put in an existing trench where density and people already are for $50 million, as opposed to through 45 acres of woods and under a lake for $2 billion. My hopes for our city are many, but responsible use of our lands as a way to ensure our Norths clean air and water is high up on my list for my kids future.

Saymoukda Vongsay poet/playwright

I want to live in a foragable city. I want to see fruits and vegetables growing abundantly. Replace empty lots, bare exterior walls, and abandoned structures with edible flowers, plants, fruits, and vegetables. Make every block look like a salad. Pea pods climbing the IDS tower. Beautiful and delicious. Clean our rivers and lakes and let herbs and watercress take over. End plastic bottles and grow crunchy watercucumbers, chestnuts, bean sprouts, and jicama. Give everyone olive oil and salt for on-the-go/anytime-anyplace simple dressing.

Also, chandeliers hanging on all the trees because we all deserve a bit of fancy in our lives.

Peter Rachleffco-executive director, East Side Freedom Library

Id like to change the teaching of American history in the public schoolsits content and its pedagogy. The content should include attention to the expropriation of indigenous people, the enslavement of Africans, the exploitation of immigrants, conflicts around race, class, and gender, and how these experiences and issues are inter-related. The pedagogy should include techniques that empower students as the tellers of stories, as being responsible for defining critical issues and shaping narratives. At the East Side Freedom Library we have seen the value of such changes in the hundreds of middle and high school students who have engaged with us through the National History Day program. These changes can impact how young people understand themselves and their place in American history.

Maria Regan Gonzalez Mayor of Richfield

Id eliminate the sweeping racial inequities we face in outcomes and opportunities, making us one of the worst places in the country to live for people of color. We need a Twin Cities region where homes, affordable quality child care, health, leadership positions, educational attainment, well-paying jobs, and access to opportunities are afforded to everyone, not just some. Could you imagine a Twin Cities region that would instead be recognized for its ability to truly welcome and leverage diversity as an asset? We have the tools to make this a reality, like the ability to substantially invest in community-based solutions and getting serious about resourcing, hiring, electing, investing in, and retaining leaders of color to be successful across all industries and sectors.

Jeremiah EllisonMinneapolis City Council Member, Ward 5

I would lower rentsboth housing and commercial rent, especially the storefronts that small businesses operate out of, whether this means rent stabilization or rent control. The mayor and I have been working on a few things, and were looking to everything were able to doand learning what we can and cant do. As the city becomes less and less affordable for working-class folks, the task seems daunting. But were gonna put our money where our mouth is.

Fancy Ray McCloney The Best Lookin Man In Comedy

Three ways to change the Twin Cities for the better: 1. Lower parking rates in downtown areas. Businesses are hurting in both downtowns. 2. No more winter weather after January 15. Snowbirds would stay here year round. 3. More Prince and Fancy Ray murals around the Cities. Prince makes Minneapolitans proud and Fancy Ray makes those same folks feel good.

Ann Kim Restaurateur

I hope to see Minneapolis/St. Paul be the epicenter of innovation in food, the arts, technology, medical advancements, and climate change. This may seem like a grandiose vision, but if you dont see it, you cant be it. Theres no reason why the Twin Cities cant be looked to like New York or L.A. as an incubator for innovation and trendsetting. We just have to claim it, commit to it, support it, and do it. I believe this can be done by working collaboratively with leaders across disciplines to see where our individual/organizational goals intersect to support the greater vision of excellence. It starts from the top with inspired leaders working toward a long game, taking meaningful risks, thinking big, embracing change, and telling fear to fuck off.

Mitra JalaliSt. Paul City Council member, Ward 4

I want to see our city have a mix of more new and integrated neighborhoods, with some of these really thriving, long-time communities of color able to stay in the city, and build wealth, and have political empowerment. I want the character of the city to feel palpably different. Our community has, to many, felt like an old town, that the loudest voices are wealthier white homeowners, whose priorities are reflected. Were actually 51 percent renters, a majority are people of color and indigenous, and the median age is 31. I want us to be more weird, and be more new-feeling.

Rana MayComic

April 2020: Donald Trump and Mike Pence die, and many people break quarantine to celebrate. Some of them die.

April 2021: The pandemic funeral episode of Greys Anatomy is the most watched event in TV history.

September 2021: A vaccination is available, but only for the elderly. People fake passports and dye their hair gray. Vaccine doses are transported on buses full of sneezing children so they dont get robbed.

2023: One lab working on a cheaper vaccine accidentally creates winged cats who can fly up to 100 miles. The cats congregate in the trees like crows and hunt people.

2031: The newly installed cat-person dictator is laser focused on cat-related policy, but still grants universal healthcare, subsidized housing for all, prison reform, and immigration reform. Everyone is forced to have one cat. Unless theyre allergic.

Tricia Heuring co-founder, Public Functionary

Instead of the city holding vacant spaces for wealthy developers to turn into luxury housing, underutilized space would be gifted to community organizers and arts leaders who live in that neighborhood. Systems could be set up so that organizers would have at least a year, rent-free, to design their space and operations with and for their communities. Each space would come with a two-year start-up operating grant, so they are resourced from day one. Perhaps then we would have inclusive, accessible multi-disciplinary community and art spaces that pass from generation to generation in every. single. neighborhood.

Free Black Dirt artist collective

If Free Black Dirt ruled the world (imagine that?)or the microcosm of it within Minneapoliswe would center healing and reparations as a vision for transformation in our city for indigenous, black, POC, and refugee communities, whove been historically foreclosed from wealth and are currently being gentrified from the center of our city. Some specific programs we would put into establishment are:

A reparations-funded network of beautiful healing spaces and spas, with an array of healing modalities from acupuncture, bodywork, herbalism, and other ancestral therapies. Historically oppressed and marginalized communities would get access. So many crystals and images of powerful BIPOC ancestors.

A queer, black imagitorium and library with extended fellowships for reading and retreat. There will be copious pillows, tea, and treats.

Implementing a radical healing of the K-12 Minnesota curriculum that centers the history, futures, and resilience of indigenous, black, POC, immigrant, and LGBTQIA+ communities in our state, as well as an analysis of the destructiveness and persistence of white supremacy in our world.

Amazing and abundantly funded art programs in ALL neighborhoods for people of all ages to learn visual art, dance, theater, meditation, plus roller skate and dream!

Create a free and mandatory therapeutic program for all white-bodied folks and people of European descent to do some deep dive healing around whiteness and white supremacy. Something like a Hazelden for whiteness.

Legalizing cannabis with a reparations focus for the black, brown, and low-income people who suffered most under the war on drugs to have prioritized access to the industry.

Clean, beautiful, spacious, and eco-friendly housing for all, with edible gardens and community space for peace and pleasure.

An anti-gentrification plan and task force.

UNIVERSAL BASIC INCOME.

Read the original 2000 story "When You Wish Upon a City" here.

Read our follow up about how many of those wishes came true here.

See the original post:

2020 vision: What should the Twin Cities look like tomorrow? - City Pages

Bennett & Leibsohn: Here’s what nation must ask itself – Home – WSFX

Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox.Sign up here.

President Donald Trump has called the efforts to combatCOVID-19our big war.He has referred to himself as a wartime president and of hisadministrations efforts as a war against the virus. Last week he spoke ofthe virus as an invisible enemy.

Andto provideconfidence as well as calm, he has also iterated many times thatthis will not be forever, tweeting Monday: We cannot let the cure be worse thanthe problem, at the end of the 15-day period we will make a decision as to whichway we want to go.

Still, state and local governments are also engaging with war-likestatements by governors and mayors, several of whom have issued shelter-in-place orders, quarantinesand travel bans.More will soon join.

REP. DAN CRENSHAW: CHINAS CORONAVIRUS LIES PREY ON US DIVISIONS HERES HOW TO FIGHT THEIR PROPAGANDA

Where businesses have not been ordered to close by governors, they have been greatly restricted.TheNational Guard hasbeen mobilized and bailouts have been proposed in the trillions ofdollars.Food and supplies are beingboth rationed andhoarded.And the president is criticized hourly for doing too much, and not enough, at the sametime.

For those who did not live through World War II, this is asmall window into what America looks like when it goes to war. Or is it?The word isdeployed and quickly civilliberties, including travel, are being curbed while the economy is melting fast.But the U.S. military is not invadinganywhere, artillery is not being fired,ordnance is not being dropped.This hasall the domestic attributes of war, with much of life disruptedandan economyheld in abeyance, but we know its not really a war.Not really.And our response is disproportionate.

Daily, the television and cable chyrons show numbers of sickand dead.Each loss is sad and horrible.In the U.S., as ofthis writing, those infected are 41,569, with504deaths.Admittedly, we dont know the full consequences of the virus, and thesmartest of analysts admit we are dealing withincompletedata. Yet more and more are beginning to question whatlawyers call redressability.Is theresponse to the virus equal to the problem?

What, a sane society needs to ask, is the national fatalityrate of the disease and what is the result of losing everything else?

We have had other non-kinetic wars before. Earlier we hearda lot about the War on Drugs, a full-scale effort that involvedenforcement, prevention and treatment. Perhaps warwas a good word, perhaps not, but the efforts were aimed at a problem that tookthe lives of some 870,000 Americansover the past three decades, with the U.S.congratulatingitself for reducing drug deaths to 67,367 last year.In that effort againstillegal drugs, we never even contemplated doing the variety of things we aredoing now.Maybe there never really wasa war on drugs.Certainly not like thisone.

Today, to paraphrase the Manhattan Institutes Heather Mac Donald, we have engaged inthe volitional destruction of the economy and caused unbridled panic over a number we dont know we will reach but most think will not surpass the combinedannual death toll of the regular flu and annual traffic deaths, to say nothing of opioid deaths.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR OPINION NEWSLETTER

We are beingdisproportionate. The measures being undertaken now willhave far-reaching and potentially disastrousconsequences.We need to beattentive to isolation as potentially more dangerous than normal life, leadingto more suicide, more opioid abuseand more domestic abuse endemics we havewaged other wars on.We will soonstart see theconsequence of lost wages.And the elderly, who are most at risk for their physical health are alsonow most vulnerable from the economicconsequences as their nest eggs andretirements evaporate.

What, a sane society needs to ask, is the national fatalityrate of the disease and what is the result of losing everything else?As of now, we believethe first number is1.3percent. That is,if you catch this virus and if you test positive, yourodds of dying from it are 1.3 percent.And if youare under 60, much less than that.We have no idea of the results of losingeverything else.

As the economist Steve Moore wrote us: We have gone from acrisis from an act of nature to a crisis that is manmade from the stupidity ofshutting down our economic engines. I dont know how serious this virus will bebut I do know if the economy stays paralyzed for another monththe carnage willbe in the trillions of dollars. The health impact alone frombankruptcies, unemploymentand isolation could be worse than thedisease.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Rudyard Kipling warned: Dont lose your head when all about you are losing theirs. Lets conclude the 15-day period as the president advises. That will get usto next Monday. Then see where we are. Then maybe we can get back to normal.

Every warhas its catchphrases and watchwords.Today,one important word and guidepost is missing: proportionality.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE BY BILL BENNETT

Seth Leibsohn is a senior fellow at theClaremont Instituteand the host of The SethLeibsohn Show, heard dailyon 970am/KKNT in Phoenix, Ariz.

See more here:

Bennett & Leibsohn: Here's what nation must ask itself - Home - WSFX

Sorry, Donald Trump: America Can’t Be at ‘War’ with Coronavirus – The National Interest

For weeks, the Trump administration was criticized for the appearance of not taking the spread of the coronavirus as a serious threat. After it was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization, White House officials began responding in a more appropriate manner. Since last week, President Donald Trump has reveled in the use of military rhetoric and taking on the trappings of a wartime president.

This includes constant repetition of the phrase we will win.

I want all Americans to understand: we are at war with an invisible enemy [the coronavirus], but that enemy is no match for the spirit and resolve of the American people, Trump tweeted yesterday. It cannot overcome the dedication of our doctors, nurses, and scientistsand it cannot beat the LOVE, PATRIOTISM, and DETERMINATION of our citizens. Strong and United, WE WILL PREVAIL!

This analogy raises the concern that individuals will misunderstand the crisis. The United States is not at war with a nation-state. It is beset by a virusa naturally caused, unthinking affliction that cannot be intimidated by determination. Even patriots can get sick.

This language has real-world effects. Recently the federal government refused to provide the total number of coronavirus testing kits in its possession for reasons of national securityas if the enemy would know our strength and respond.

Trump is not the only one adopting this kind of rhetoric. The crisis we face from the coronavirus is on a scale of a major war, and we must act accordingly, said Senator Bernie Sanders, whose campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination remains active. The number of casualties may actually be even higher than what the armed forces experienced in World War II. In other words, we have a major, major crisis and we must act accordingly.

Tackling this pandemic is a national emergency akin to fighting a war, agreed former Vice President Joe Biden, the presumptive 2020 Democratic nominee.

Nor are the current cast of politicians the first to invoke this imagery. Since the end of World War II, where supreme power was invested in the federal government with full control over the economy and peoples daily lives, numerous politicians have used the war terminology to describe their own programs. This includes the War on Poverty (a human state of being that is both relative and permanent), the War on Drugs (a direct consequence of which was the militarization of the U.S. police force), and the War on Terror (a not-always-defined military tactic).

The irony of the situation is that like his immediate predecessors, Donald Trump is already a wartime president. U.S. forces are currently engaged in armed conflict in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and multiple parts of Africa, while simultaneously waging drone wars in several other countries.

Hunter DeRensis is the senior reporter for theNational Interest. Follow him on Twitter@HunterDeRensis.

Image:U.S. PresidentDonaldTrumpaddresses the coronavirus response daily briefing at the White House in Washington, U.S., March 19, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY.

Go here to see the original:

Sorry, Donald Trump: America Can't Be at 'War' with Coronavirus - The National Interest

"Ive never done anything like it but Ive also never got such a good result" Brian Fallon goes in-depth on the making of new album Local…

Give the drummer some. They can make a record great, and Brian Fallon is well aware of it. When we meet to talk about the landmark solo album he's about to release, he's full of enthusiasm for Kurt Leon before we even sit down, whose inventive playing brings new colours to some of the finest songs Fallon has ever written.

"Hes one of the best drummers Ive ever heard," breams Brian. "Its crazy the stuff thats hes done hes played with Brian Blade. Hes now in the live band and I didnt know him before the record. We did the record and I said, Youve got to play with me, I cant let this go. It was just amazing."

Local Honey is a special album. It's not the heart-pounding, highway-conquering punk rock and r 'n' b hotrod many will know and admire Fallon for from his Gaslight Anthem work. And sonically, under the detailed production ear of Peter Katis (The National, The War On Drugs) it's a marked departure from his previous two solos albums, 2016's Painkillers and 2018's Sleepwalkers. And yet it speaks just as loud and clear in its own, heartfelt way. It's pure Brian Fallon, more than anything he's done before.

Here he speaks with marked candour about the genesis, toil and vindication behind the album's creation. But we should still start with the drums

Did any of the songs change due to that percussive element?

The big changes happened before I went in because I had this idea of what I wanted it to sound like and then I started writing it, and somewhere in the middle of the summer last year I just flipped the whole thing.

"I was trying to make the songs louder, more rock I guess and it was just not happening. I thought, this sucks it sounds terrible. Most of the songs I rewrote and then a lot of the songs I decided, if this song can survive on piano and guitar by itself then it can live. If not Im throwing it away. A lot of them I would do that way; some of them stayed and some of them left. Then others I wrote from scratch when I figured out what I was going to do.

"I tried to do the cardinal sin which was to ignore your subconscious"

So it wasnt a case of you coming off your acoustic tour last year and wanting to a write a more acoustic-based album at all?

It was, in my subconscious. What happened was, I tried to do the cardinal sin which was ignore your subconscious because I didnt realise then what was happening. In the summer the thing that I found out is I was on those tours, I did the US in the fall and over here [UK and Europe] in the February of last year and I was like, you know what thats what was moving me, Ive got to follow that.

I think I was listening to Time Out Of Mind from Bob Dylan, I was thinking about the tour and listening to that record and thats when I thought, this is what its supposed to sound like. I know what Im doing now. And then that was it I just went forward.

"And I didnt even have a producer. Peter hadnt even joined yet. I think I talked to Peter about a month before I went in. I was like, Are you free by any chance? Peter does like 900 records a year by the National and War On Drugs, no big deal, right? He said, Ive got the whole month of October. I said Id be there, I drove up to Connecticut and we did it.

This isn't an Americana album it's not the Brian Fallon folk album. Was that a challenging path to avoid going down?

Thats Peter though. If you left me to my own devices it would probably be more traditional, there would have been fiddles on it. I think thats why I went to Peter. I think people make traditional Americana records better than I could. I didnt want to compete. Because Im the kind of person where if I cant at least do well, I dont want to compete. Im not going to run you in a race because I cant run.

"The guys Im influenced by too, like Tom Waits and Bruce Springsteen, theyve always been part of it but a little left of centre"

Also, I admire the people that are out right now but I dont what to be like them. I want to do my own thing. The guys Im influenced by too, like Tom Waits and Bruce Springsteen, theyve always been part of it but a little left of centre.

"Even Bruces acoustic records, theyre not traditional Americana records and especially Tom. Theyre a part of it and they embrace it. I embrace Americana and thats one of the music I listen to the most but Im not trying to shoehorn in there."

One of the striking things about this album is the way it balances a sense of intimacy and being exposed with sonic details how challenging was that to balance?

Extraordinarily difficult. We did so much work on adding things, taking away things, moving things. Its not only about the way its recorded, its how it sounds with the other things.

"Normally you make a record and you track drums, bass, guitar at the same time or you do everything one on one. But its ok heres my coffee, heres the sugar, milk and heres the spoon. Youre adding stuff together. With this, you put an element in and youre like, no its off balance. So that comes out. Then you put another element in, that works. Then you put another in and its off balance. It was such a process. It was weird and Ive never done anything like it but Ive also never got such a good result.

"Peter Katis really inspired me to try different things because I was very much a traditionalist"

What it started with a lot of the time was Id go to the piano and just play the song and record it. Vocal and guitar or vocal and piano. Thats it. Then we would start building everything up. But sometimes by the time it got to the playing or the drums would go on, whatever I did in the beginning would go away. So it was constantly evolving.

And you had to be open to that?

Yes, and at first I was not. But then Peter would be like, Look, its 2019, we dont make records like the '60s anymore. Those records have been made, theyve already done the best thats going to happen. I think we should go forward. He really inspired me to try different things because I was very much a traditionalist. I was, live or its not real. But apparently theres all these different ways to do it.

Theres actually a plenty of electric guitar going on and those parts fit in without overpowering the songs. Do you feel thats where a lot of your woodshedding as a player has paid dividends?

Big time because with those kind of songs you cant just shred a solo. Maybe its because Im older and Ive been playing a lot longer, I learned how to do crazy stuff and how to play crazy licks but the hardest thing guitar players learn is you have to know when to stop. When not play, and you cant be shredding the whole time. Once you have that skill you want to do it you want to play because playings fun but not on these songs, youve got to be careful. Its more what you dont play.

With this stuff I was looking at the way Daniel Lanois plays, hes got that band Black Dub that he plays in and if you listen to his guitar playing its extremely held back but its tasteful.

"Even the Tom Waits records Keith Richards played on, like Rain Dogs, he would play these extremely tasty things but it was way in the back. One note had to mean everything. If I didnt go through the last two years, and Im still doing it Im learning. Im way into Julian Lage now, Im learning all these different things. But youve got to hold back, thats the secret. Hit the right note at the right time.

Are some of the acoustic fingerpicking patterns in these songs challenging when playing along to the percussion?

It is but I lead it. The big thing was Kurt had to find something that fits thats not the train beat. But Kurt would not play the train beat, he said, Thats what everybody plays and Im just not interested in doing that. Ok, great. Show me something cool then, and he did.

We treated everything as if it was living, so my part would evolve a little bit, his part would evolve a little. But fingerpicking, thats not for the faint of heart. Im still learning theres like 50 million patterns out there. Again though, youve got to be tasteful with the fingerpicking.

"You Have Stolen My Heart is so much harder than it seems"

"Its funny because I learned the fingerpicking from Mark Knopfler and he did the records with Emmylou Harris and that later period solo work like All The Road Running. Theres a song he did called Haul Away and it sounds like an old Irish ballad. I was trying to figure it out and hes using standard chords but hes playing it like a piano, not like a guitar.

"That was one of the tricks I used on the record, chord-wise. When a piano moves chords its not like 1,2,3,4 move, its 1 and 2 and 3 and 4. If you move guitar chords like that you have to adapt your strumming and your picking. Jeff Buckley did it really well and Nina Simones guitar player [Alvin Schackman] did it amazingly.

"So I was learning that these chords were moving at different times but it wasnt a fingerpicking song, how do I do this? And on Haul Away, Mark was strumming with his fingers but its not up and down, theres not like a bass note and then a high strum a boom-ring, boom-ring, to keep the beat. With this theres only the ring. So its rest, ring-ring. To get that delicate strum the strum on the song You Have Stolen My Heart is so much harder than it seems."

Playing and singing that too, not easy

At the same time! So all those tricks, and the drumming and the lyrics are like the heroes of the record. The funny thing is I had that small-bodied Martin I showed you last time. There were vintage guitars laying around all the time. There were a couple of Gibsons laying around and they were cool and we used them but the main guitar we used was that 00-42 Martin and my National Resonator. All over the record.

So the two were layered because they brought different qualities?

Yes, and when you put them together, it was so weird how that worked. And the resonator, I couldnt believe it. I just brought it along thinking Id play some slide on it, whatever. But it killed it! But that wasnt me, that was Peter he was all about trying things.

Did you play all the guitar parts on the record?

I played 90% of the guitar on the record, but Ian [Perkins] he played some slide parts. He did some cool delayed stuff. If Im in Wilco, I might be Jeff and hes Nils.

"But funnily enough, on the first song [When You're Ready] the whole thing was fingerpicked and then I was like, I dont know because fingerpicking it makes it sounds like the train beat thing and my drummer, the hero, Kurt Leon said, Give me the guitar, you should strum it like this because the guitar is like a dad playing the song to his kid on the side of the bed. Dads dont know how to play guitar, theyre just goofing so they would play it like this and it sounded perfect, so I said, "Go play it."

"So the first song on the record, thats not me, thats Kurt. Which is hilarious because I did all this work and then Kurt does it!

Its good that youre open to that though

Youve just got to get the best whatevers best

The lyrics to When You're Ready really hit me as a father, but also, youve always kept the parent part of your life private, understandably, so was it hard for you to share that song?

It was but I think the whole record is about that. Ive always had this wall that Ive put up. Even the most personal songs Ive written before I never opened up all the way. I guess its maybe the age or the place Im at in life where I think, Im just going to do this and Im not worried about hiding anything. I dont care well its not that I dont care because I do care, but Im ok with being uncomfortable. Im ok with being exposed. This is how I feel about my daughter, it might not be the most politically-charged world-changing song but to me it is, because I feel that way about my kids.

"I wish I was cool but I dont mind that Im not"

Part of that place you've arrived could be the audience youve built theres a trust there. What kind of audience do you feel you have now?

I think thats my entire audience now outsiders. People that like punk but never fitted in with the punks, people that likes Americana but never fit in with the Americana. I feel that my audience is built by people who never quite fitted in. Because thats what I am.

"I made a joke one time that apparently my band was cool in 2009 but I didnt know that, nobody told me and by the time I realised that it was too late, it had gone. So I never got to enjoy the cool factor but I always felt that I was a day late, and not in and I didnt know.

Now its not even like I dont care, I totally care I wish I was cool but I dont mind that Im not. And Im actually comfortable not trying to be cool. The last thing I want to be is in my 40s and trying to squeeze myself into the pants I was in during my 20s. To be thats the most distasteful thing I could do.

It feels like 21 Days is a song that's already connecting with people

That song came from a lot of therapy. That song was completely influenced by my therapist.

A lot of people will listen and think, that song is about quitting smoking. But its not?

Somebody wrote, Its about quitting smoking and thats about 10% of what it is. Its about changing your life and when it says 21 days til I dont miss you the you is you, its the old you or its whoever youre running away from. Whether thats an addiction for me it was mostly about mental health. Im running away from the me that I dont want to be. Im leaving that behind and becoming which is extremely difficult to do when youre trying to change your life, its difficult to do, it makes major commitment and change.

That song, I tell you, it was like building a house one screw at a time"

Musically, it feels like something that could easily have become a full-blown rock song

It was a full on rock song. This is what happened with that song I sent the demo to Peter. Everyone loved the song, they loved the demo of it.

He goes, Im not sure I know what to do with this kind of music. And I said, What do you mean?

He said: I like it and I can appreciate it but I dont know what to do with it, I dont know how to produce this.

I said: I dont know what youre talking about this is the best song.

He said, Look, Im not trying to tell you I dont like the song, Im just saying I might not be the guy to produce this song the way you have it right now. I dont know if I can do this."

I went back and told him I might leave this song off the record. But it meant too much lyrically. I didnt know about the music but lyrically it meant too much. So I said to my wife, Ive got to figure this out.

So I sat down at the piano and it took me weeks. For most people the end of the story would be, I sat down at the piano by myself and it worked. No, I sat down at the piano and slammed the piano closed and stormed out, walking around the backyard frustrated, pacing around.

It took me weeks until one night the kids just went to bed and I said to my wife, Can you just sit down and I know this the 15th time Ive played this song but what about like this? Tried it and my wife and I were both thats the way it should go. And then I recorded it just like that. It was so bare with just one guitar. I said to Peter, How about now? He said, Thats cool lets try it like that. But he didnt say thats it. It was a good start."

That song, I tell you, it was like building a house one screw at a time. It was crazy. It was so difficult. I was belting it, really singing it. But [Peter] said, At first, youve got to sing it quiet talk it. But I responded, Thats what you do with The National, I dont want to be like that. But he said, you dont sound like The National, you sound like you. So I did it. We recorded it with me yelling and recorded it with me quiet and I swear to you it hit harder when it was quiet. And I was like, I dont believe this just happened. But that really opened my eyes to a lot of things. Big time.

With Peter, were you were sending him demos before going into the studio so he was getting an idea of what youll need to do when you get there?

Yes but with Peter, you send him a demo and he listens to the song and the structure but he does not tell you his ideas. He just starts going for it. Youve kind of got to go, Thats cool. Thats too far because that man would make a wild record if I just let him go. Hes very talented but hes straight up mix of Pink Floyd with Brian Wilson. He goes for it. Its wild.

Even at your level you have to work hard at songwriting still

It was hard, you have to work at it all the time.

Is it tempting to throw a song away when you have to rework it to such a degree?

There was one called I Dont Mind When Im With You that I loved. That song was triple the speed, same with Lonely For You Only. Very fast songs. But something about the lyrics and there was one little bit of the melody, it was like a hook that was in me. Not a musical hook, like a fish hook. I kept pulling me. I tried to throw those songs away two or three times because I had other songs. There was something pulling me so I had to keep clawing away. And honestly, it took months.

The only song that came out quick was When Youre Ready. Vincent took forever. I wrote 20 versions of that song lyrically. It was forever."

Vincent is written from a female perspective, like Here Comes My Man

Yeah, and Vincent was my attempt at writing 100% fiction, so it was actually based off a couple of stories I heard in the news. Not current, a while ago. So it was stewing around in my mind and what happened was I watched the documentary on Nick Cave and he was talking about the album Murder Ballads and I got to thinking about Nick Cave and Bruce Springsteen, writing the Nebraska songs. I thought, Im going to try and write a fictional song fictional in details but 100 per cent non fictional in emotion.

Honestly, that was what the thing was moving to me, because everybody knows what that feels like to be tired of a situation thats really bad. How do you get out of it? In fiction you can do anything, you dont have to follow the laws and the rules of what youre supposed to do.

That song started from the first lyric too. I was listening to Dolly Parton and I thought of people who were named after songs because my daughter is named after the song Layla. I was always wondering, I wonder if they hate that? Do people named after songs hate the song theyre named after or can they embrace it? Im not sure and I feel bad because I did it.

"I chuckled to myself and said, "My named is Jolene, but I hate that song", and I thought that was pretty funny then I thought, oh thats dark. I sat at the piano and worked on it and had that first little section; I was baptised in a river when I was young. And thats all I had for months.

Then I just wrote 100 different versions because Id never done a fiction song. So in my head I wondered, what happens? I had to figure out not what I wanted to happen but what is the character telling me happens. And not only that but what makes sense in four minutes, and it was hard. Now, its so rewarding because its one of my favourite songs on the record.

So that song started with a lyric, is the process of songwriting kind of random in terms of the initial inspiration for you?

Yes, sometimes its like a riff that Im fooling around with, sometimes its a lyrics, sometimes a title. Sometimes I just start fishing; I sit down, play and start singing stuff. A lot of times its a drum beat that I hear.

You mentioned the piano impacting your chord approach, does that instrument help get you out of comfort zones as a writer?

Sure but at the same time I will say this though. I started to learn all these different chord progressions because Ive always been I / V / vi / IV a lot, and variations of that. But you know, I like that chord progression still. And I said to Peter, "I learned all this jazz stuff so should I be using these chords?" And hes like, No because its not sad, use the sad chords. Thats whats good.

"It kind of gave me permission. I didnt care, Im using the chords I want to use. Even the song Nocturne by Julian Lage, its B flat minor to A flat and then D flat. Its the same chord progression I use but its like this really fancy jazz song but its kind of the same thing.

Do you think theres this element of being at peace with that being a core part of your style, something you can experiment with there's this core?

I think its a thing thats my thing. If you boiled it down its the melodies of those chords. Well some people might say to me, well thats boring you used the same chords all the times. I think thats pretty creative Ive written like 95 songs with similar chords. I dont know about you but I think Im doing alright. You know what Im saying? I know what the chords are, Ive got the VIIth, the Ixs, the XIs over the suspends but I dont care.

I read in an interview with Tom Petty, a guitar player came up to him, a friend of his, and said, Ive got this cool chord and I used it in a song. And Tom Petty said, Why? Do you know why that chords not been used in a song before? Because its not good. Fair enough, because you know what works? G, D and C. So leave it to Tom Petty, bless him.

The song Hard Feelings are you channeling Knopfler there?

That is my exclusive attempt to write a Mark Knopfler-covering-Tom Petty song. Because it has that feeling. That song took me two years to write. I had the bits of it but I needed to keep going.

"That song is so funny because it uses the same chords that were talking about but I don't think it repeats more than twice. Its constantly moving forwards. When I played the piano on that song I thought, this sucks its so hard. The patterns of the chord cycle only happen twice then it moves, throughout the whole song. Like many of Marks songs it sounds so simple but its so not simple.

You couldnt have written a song like that two years ago?Not a chance. Thats why I stalled two years ago, theres a song two years ago that wasnt even done I just stopped.

Moving on to gear, were there any pedals that proved useful in the overdub stages?

We had cool stuff. We were in Connecticut so Analog Man is right there and we hit up Mike [Piera] and drove to his shop a couple of times and picked up all this stuff. So I had this King Of Tone that I always have with me.

More:

"Ive never done anything like it but Ive also never got such a good result" Brian Fallon goes in-depth on the making of new album Local...

National parks pay the price as land conflicts intensify in Colombia – Mongabay.com

Colombia is the worlds second-most biodiverse country after Brazil. Central Colombias Macarena region, in particular, is important for biodiversity as it serves as a transition zone between three major biomes: the Amazon rainforest, the eastern savannah, and the Andes mountains. Further, the isolated mountain range is home to three national parks: Sierra de la Macarena, Cordillera de los Picachos and Tinigua.

But underlying this biological richness are large petroleum deposits that beckon to oil companies. Meanwhile, cattle ranchers and farmers are stripping habitat for pasture and cropland, and large-scale landowners are expanding their holdings into pristine forest once untouchable due to FARC presence.

Conservationists and scientists are concerned that Macarenas exceptional biodiversity may fall victim to economic interests. Lucas Barrientos, professor of Evolutionary Biology at Rosario University, told Mongabay the region is highly important from a conservation standpoint because it serves as a biological corridor through which wildlife and their genes can pass from one ecosystem and population to another.

On one hand, there are so many species in this region that we havent even had a chance to discover them for science. More than that, this region serves as a corridor for genetic flows, which means populations dont remain isolated from each other, Barrientos said. These can be small organisms like insects or amphibians as well as large mammals. This flow of genetic diversity is important to keeping the populations healthy.

Barrientos went on to explain that the region is made of dry rainforest habitat, which is Colombias most endangered ecosystem. He said there are endemic species that are supremely specified and adapted to thrive in this particular ecosystem.

Last month, authorities extinguished a fire in the Sierra de la Macarena National Park that nearly reached the banks of the Cao Cristales river. A well-known tourist attraction, the Cao Cristales provides habitat to a sensitive species of underwater plant called Macarenia clavigera, which explodes into a living rainbow of gold, olive green, blue, black and red for a few months every year.

The Colombian Ministry of Defense and Reuters reported the blaze was set by FARC guerrillas who have rejected the peace process, known by the government as FARC dissidents, as they attempted to expand coca cultivation in the region. However, local sources consulted by Mongabay say the authorities version of events is unlikely because the region is unattractive for large-scale coca growing compared to other regions of the country. While coca is cultivated for traditional purposes, its also grown to produce cocaine.

Local tour guide and biologist Jhon Muoz, who resides in the nearby town of La Macarena, told Mongabay it wasnt necessarily the guerrillas who set the fire. Instead he suspects small farmers called campesinos or cattle ranchers set the fires to protest the governments recent anti-deforestation operations that have been blamed for the displacement of families residing within the countrys national parks. Nevertheless, he said it was unclear who set the fire, and nobody knows the exact reasons why it was started.

The Defense Minister reported that it was the FARC dissidents trying to plant coca. That is completely false because Cao Cristales sits on hard, rocky land, Muoz said. That fire could have been set by campesinos as reprisal for the forced evictions that are taking place in the parks.

The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime monitors coca cultivation in Colombia by satellite. Comparison of data from 2015 before the FARC demobilized and 2018 shows there has been a significant decrease in coca crop density in the region since the peace agreement was signed. An expert on Colombias armed conflict consulted for this article confirmed coca inside the park has been uncommon for around a decade.

Since the demobilization of the FARC in 2016, deforestation has skyrocketed in the region, most notably in Tinigua Natural National Park. Deforestation shot up 400% in Tinigua between 2017 and 2018 based on satellite data from Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project (MAAP), an initiative of the organization Amazon Conservation.

Colombias Institute of Hydrology, Meteorology and Environmental Studies (IDEAM) found the La Macarena municipality registered a 26% increase in deforestation in 2018, the greatest increase in deforestation anywhere in the country. Almost half of the loss of forest came from the Tinigua Park, Rodrigo Botero, director of environmental non-profit FCDS, told Mongabay Latam.

Deforestation in the park looks set to jump again in 2020, with data from the University of Maryland showing much heavier tree cover loss between January and March this year than during the same period in 2019.

In March 2020, a study published in Nature found there has been a dramatic increase in deforestation in the majority of Colombias protected areas and buffer zones following the demobilization of the FARC in 2016. The study said armed groups, especially FARC dissidents, are consolidating within national parks such as Tinigua, assigning land to farmers and promoting livestock and coca crops as an economic engine of the colonization process.

These groups are reactivating old tracks used during the past conflict and opening new ones, to create a political-military transportation network, the studys authors write. This territorial-control strategy allows consolidating a social basis for these armed groups, economic inputs for rearmament, and a population exploiting this territorial security, which also represents a source of recruitment for the guerrillas.

In Colombia, park rangers are killed on a relatively regular basis. A total of 12 rangers were killed between 1994 and 2020, according to Semana Magazine.

Colombia is a dangerous place for many people. This is particularly true for indigenous and community leaders who routinely face the threat of assassination at the hands of mercenaries paid by powerful landholders exerting territorial and economic control, as well as by illegal armed groups operating with impunity in many of the countrys remote regions.

Non-profit conflict monitoring organization Indepaz reports 817 social leaders and human rights defenders were killed in Colombia in the little more than three years between ratification of the Peace Agreement between the government and the FARC in November 2016 and February 28, 2020.

Estefania Ciros is an academic investigator who grew up near the Macarena region in Caquet, a department that sits in the foothills region where the Amazon rainforest meets the Andes mountains. Ciros, who works for the Colombia Truth Commission, told Mongabay that the indigenous and campesino communities of the Macarena have long suffered as an epicenter of U.S. drug prohibitionist and extractivist policies that began at the turn of the 20th century. She said the extractivist and anti-drug policies promoted by the U.S. were carried out in cooperation with Bogotas adversarial agenda against the regions campesinos.

Extractive industries such as rubber and petroleum companies arrived at the beginning of the 20th century, Ciros said. Later came the process known as the tigrillero where people from Bogota and foreign countries paid people to go into the forests to get skins from the tigrillos. The tigrillo, or oncilla (Leopardus tigrinus), is a small spotted cat native to Central and South America; it is listed as Vulnerable by the IUCN.

Alongside the extractivist activities, carried out with support from North American companies, the Colombian state promoted colonization of the region. By the middle of the century, a violent civil war between Liberals and Conservatives led to another wave of colonization when Liberals fled to the Macarena to escape violence.

The liberals who fled the violence ended up politicizing the campesinos in the region, which ended up seeding the armed uprising, the very basis of what would become the FARC, Ciros said. In the years that followed, drug traffickers, elites and people from other regions came introducing marijuana and coca to the campesinos who lacked access to markets and were struggling to maintain basic material necessities of life.

With the region inundated with illicit crops, interests arising from the U.S. found the right justification under the War on Drugs to intervene in the region. Plan Colombia, signed in 1998 under President Bill Clinton, combined with former President Alvaro Uribes 2002 Democratic Security initiative, provided billions of dollars to spend on the anti-insurgent campaign in the region, Ciros said.

Plan Colombia cost the U.S. over $10 billion and experts say it failed to lower coca growing and cocaine trafficking in the country in the long-term. The foreign aid provided the government with advanced military technology such as Black Hawk helicopters, while paramilitaries decimated villages and political leaders that were sympathetic to the insurgency. Even with the billions of dollars in military aid, however, the government was unable to defeat the insurgents on the battlefield, and negotiations to find a peaceful exit to the conflict began informally under former President Uribe between 2008 and 2010.

By 2016, the FARC and the government under former President Juan Manuel Santos reached a historic peace agreement after four years of negotiation. The FARC demobilized by the end of the year, turning over thousands of weapons to the United Nations and moving their demobilized soldiers into reintegration camps.

While the FARC committed a great number of human rights abuses against campesinos during the half-century of armed conflict, the rebels considered themselves to be an armed uprising of the campesino rural class. As such, the rebels worked closely with communities to produce coexistence manuals that created clear rules and regulations on many issues, including farming practices, environmental protection, and criminal conduct.

With the reincorporation of the FARC, the coexistence manuals and community regulations were left up in the air. The state didnt think to hold up or strengthen the communal action committees, but rather did the opposite, Ciros said.

Barrientos added that the FARC had a vested interest in maintaining the forest cover to keep the drug-trafficking routes they supported hidden from the authorities who patrolled the skies.

While the upper echelons and thousands of foot soldiers were demobilized from the FARC, critics say current President Ivan Duque has largely turned his back on the peace agreement, instead accommodating far right conservative elements who reject the concessions made to end more than half a century of violence. Since his election in 2018, Duques government has been locked in nearly constant scandals with investigations underway for ties to mafia figures, vote buying and Uribes role in the formation of a paramilitary group in the 1990s.

With the lure of record-breaking drug trafficking revenue still on the table combined with a lack of basic security guarantees for demobilized rebels, thousands of guerrillas under the command of non-conformist rebel commander Gentil Duarte have returned to the battlefield and have wrested, or rather failed to surrender, territorial control to the State in Colombias northern Amazon and La Macarena.

Large-scale landholders, a Latin American rural class known as latifundios, were once afraid of investing in the northern Amazon region because they feared extortion, kidnapping and infrastructure attacks. However, Ciros said the latifundios viewed the peace agreement as an opportunity to expand their holdings by buying up small holdings and encouraging further colonization of rainforest lands that can be converted into productive cattle pasture.

Ciros says multinational oil companies are moving in at the same time, buying sympathy in the communities by paying for road infrastructure improvements that will lower costs for campesinos by facilitating trade with external markets.

The entry of large-scale property holders and extractivists into the region explains the majority of the increases in deforestation Under Gentil Duarte there has been permissiveness toward large-scale property that didnt exist under the previous FARC, Ciros said. I cant say with certainty, but its possible hes trying to shore up local support and legitimacy.

In April 2019, President Duque launched an offensive against deforestation in the northern Amazon called Artemisa, in cooperation with military, police and public prosecutors, and accompanied by the Ministry of Environment and National Natural Parks of Colombia. Nicacio Martnez Espinel, Colombias top army commander, said 10 percent of the armys resources would be redeployed to target environmental crimes, particularly illegal deforestation.

For Ciros and other sources in the Macarena consulted by Mongabay, the military operations against campesino farmers who are accused of deforestation followed in the same stream of the hardline anti-drug, anti-insurgent policies of the previous decades.

With Artemisa, Duque declared the protection of water and forests as a matter of national security. But what does this mean? It doesnt mean stopping billion-dollar dams like Hidroituango in Antioquia or taking serious action against illegal mining, Ciros said. It means an exercise of force against a highly vulnerable population of campesinos living on land that was demarcated as a protected area in Bogota.

Human rights organization Parks with Campesinos released a statement criticizing the governments treatment of social-environmental problems in the region: Since 2017 the Government opted to take the road of violence and broken promises as a solution to the socio-environmental conflict in the territory.

The Colombia Natural National Parks authorities declined multiple requests for interviews.

Biologist Lucas Barrientos told Mongabay that the Ministry of Mines has green-lighted petroleum exploration in the Tinigua and Picachos national parks. He added that although there is political controversy over these actions in Bogota, the petroleum interests have the advantage of greater resources and more lawyers than the parks.

The government entities are separate from each other, Barrientos said. The petroleum agencies are interested in petroleum. They dont care about biodiversity.

Banner image of Cao Cristales by Gicaman via Wikimedia Commons (CCBY-SA 4.0)

Editors note:This story was powered byPlaces to Watch, a Global Forest Watch (GFW) initiative designed to quickly identify concerning forest loss around the world and catalyze further investigation of these areas. Places to Watch draws on a combination of near-real-time satellite data, automated algorithms and field intelligence to identify new areas on a monthly basis. In partnership with Mongabay, GFW is supporting data-driven journalism by providing data and maps generated by Places to Watch. Mongabay maintains complete editorial independence over the stories reported using this data.

Feedback:Use this formto send a message to the editorof this post. If you want to post a public comment, you can do that at the bottom of the page.

Continued here:

National parks pay the price as land conflicts intensify in Colombia - Mongabay.com

Beyond the Economic Chaos of Coronavirus Is a Global War Economy – Truthout

What does a virus have to do with war and repression? The coronavirus has disrupted global supply networks and spread panic throughout the worlds stock markets. The pandemic will pass, not without a heavy toll. But in the larger picture, the fallout from the virus exposes the fragility of a global economy that never fully recovered from the 2008 financial collapse and has been teetering on the brink of renewed crisis for years.

The crisis of global capitalism is as much structural as it is political. Politically, the system faces a crisis of capitalist hegemony and state legitimacy. As is now well-known, the level of global social polarization and inequality is unprecedented. In 2018, the richest 1 percent of humanity controlled more than half of the worlds wealth while the bottom 80 percent had to make do with just 4.5 percent of this wealth. Such stark global inequalities are politically explosive, and to the extent that the system is simply unable to reverse them, it turns to ever more violent forms of containment to manage immiserated populations.

Structurally, the system faces a crisis of what is known as overaccumulation. As inequalities escalate, the system churns out more and more wealth that the mass of working people cannot actually consume. As a result, the global market cannot absorb the output of the global economy. Overaccumulation refers to a situation in which enormous amounts of capital (profits) are accumulated, yet this capital cannot be reinvested profitably and becomes stagnant.

Get reliable, independent news and commentary delivered to your inbox every day.

Indeed, corporations enjoyed record profits during the 2010s at the same time that corporate investment declined. Worldwide corporate cash reserves topped $12 trillion in 2017, more than the foreign exchange reserves of the worlds central governments, yet transnational corporations cannot find enough opportunities to profitably reinvest their profits. As this uninvested capital accumulates, enormous pressures build up to find outlets for unloading the surplus. By the 21st century, the transnational capitalist class turned to several mechanisms in order to sustain global accumulation in the face of overaccumulation, above all, financial speculation in the global casino, along with the plunder of public finances, debt-driven growth and state-organized militarized accumulation.

It is the last of these mechanisms, what I have termed militarized accumulation, that I want to focus on here. The crisis is pushing us toward a veritable global police state. The global economy is becoming ever more dependent on the development and deployment of systems of warfare, social control and repression, apart from political considerations, simply as a means of making profit and continuing to accumulate capital in the face of stagnation. The so-called wars on drugs and terrorism; the undeclared wars on immigrants, refugees, gangs, and poor, dark-skinned and working-class youth more generally; the construction of border walls, immigrant jails, prison-industrial complexes, systems of mass surveillance, and the spread of private security guard and mercenary companies, have all become major sources of profit-making.

The events of September 11, 2001, marked the start of an era of a permanent global war in which logistics, warfare, intelligence, repression, surveillance, and even military personnel are more and more the privatized domain of transnational capital. Criminalization of surplus humanity activates state-sanctioned repression that opens up new profit-making opportunities for the transnational capitalist class. Permanent war involves endless cycles of destruction and reconstruction, each phase in the cycle fueling new rounds and accumulation, and also results in the ongoing enclosure of resources that become available to the capitalist class.

The Pentagon budget increased 91 percent in real terms between 1998 and 2011, while worldwide, total defense outlays grew by 50 percent from 2006 to 2015, from $1.4 trillion to $2.03 trillion, although this figure does not take into account secret budgets, contingency operations and homeland security spending. The global market in homeland security reached $431 billion in 2018 and was expected to climb to $606 billion by 2024. In the decade from 2001 to 2011, military industry profits nearly quadrupled. In total, the United States spent a mind-boggling nearly $6 trillion from 2001 to 2018 on its Middle East wars alone.

Led by the United States as the predominant world power, military expansion in different countries has taken place through parallel (and often conflictive) processes, yet all show the same relationship between state militarization and global capital accumulation. In 2015, for instance, the Chinese government announced that it was setting out to develop its own military-industrial complex modeled after the United States, in which private capital would assume the leading role. Worldwide, official state military outlays in 2015 represented about 3 percent of the gross world product of $75 trillion (this does not include state military spending not made public).

But militarized accumulation involves vastly more than activities generated by state military budgets. There are immense sums involved in state spending and private corporate accumulation through militarization and other forms of generating profit through repressive social control that do not involve militarization per se, such as structural controls over the poor through debt collection enforcement mechanisms or accumulation opportunities opened up by criminalization.

The various wars, conflicts, and campaigns of social control and repression around the world involve the fusion of private accumulation with state militarization. In this relationship, the state facilitates the expansion of opportunities for private capital to accumulate through militarization. The most obvious way that the state opens up these opportunities is to facilitate global weapons sales by military-industrial-security firms, the amounts of which have reached unprecedented levels. Between 2003 and 2010 alone, the Global South bought nearly half a trillion dollars in weapons from global arms dealers. Global weapons sales by the top 100 weapons manufacturers and military service companies increased by 38 percent between 2002 and 2016.

The U.S.-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan precipitated the explosion in private military and security contractors around the world deployed to protect the transnational capitalist class. Private military contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan during the height of those wars exceeded the number of U.S. combat troops in both countries, and outnumbered U.S. troops in Afghanistan by a three-to-one margin. Beyond the United States, private military and security firms have proliferated worldwide and their deployment is not limited to the major conflict zones in the Middle East, South Asia and Africa. In his study, Corporate Warriors, P.W. Singer documents how privatized military forces (PMFs) have come to play an ever more central role in military conflicts and wars. A new global industry has emerged, he noted. It is outsourcing and privatization of a twenty-first century variety, and it changes many of the old rules of international politics and warfare. It has become global in both its scope and activity. Beyond the many based in the United States, PMFs come from numerous countries around the world, including Russia, South Africa, Colombia, Mexico, India, the EU countries and Israel, among others.

Beyond wars, PMFs open up access to economic resources and corporate investment opportunities deployed, for instance, to mining areas and oil fields leading Singer to term PMFs investment enablers. PMF clients include states, corporations, landowners, nongovernmental organizations, even the Colombian and Mexican drug cartels. From 2005 to 2010, the Pentagon contracted some 150 firms from around the world for support and security operations in Iraq alone. By 2018, private military companies employed some 15 million people around the world, deploying forces to guard corporate property; provide personal security for corporate executives and their families; collect data; conduct police, paramilitary, counterinsurgency and surveillance operations; carry out mass crowd control and repression of protesters; manage prisons; run private detention and interrogation facilities; and participate in outright warfare.

Meanwhile, the private security (policing) business is one of the fastest growing economic sectors in many countries and has come to overshadow public security around the world. According to Singer, the amount spent on private security in 2003, the year of the invasion of Iraq, was 73 percent higher than that spent in the public sphere, and three times as many persons were employed in private forces as in official law enforcement agencies. In parts of Asia, the private security industry grew at 20 percent to 30 percent per year. Perhaps the biggest explosion of private security was the near complete breakdown of public agencies in post-Soviet Russia, with over 10,000 new security firms opening since 1989. There were an outstanding 20 million private security workers worldwide in 2017, and the industry was expected to be worth over $240 billion by 2020. In half of the worlds countries, private security agents outnumber police officers.

As all of global society becomes a highly surveilled and controlled and wildly profitable battlespace, we must not forget that the technologies of the global police state are driven as much, or more, by the campaign to open up new outlets for accumulation as they are by strategic or political considerations. The rise of the digital economy and the blurring of the boundaries between military and civilian sectors fuse several fractions of capital especially finance, military-industrial and tech companies around a combined process of financial speculation and militarized accumulation. The market for new social control systems made possible by digital technology runs into the hundreds of billions. The global biometrics market, for instance, was expected to jump from its $15 billion value in 2015 to $35 billion by 2020.

As the tech industry emerged in the 1990s, it was from its inception tied to the military-industrial-security complex and the global police state. Over the years, for instance, Google has supplied mapping technology used by the U.S. Army in Iraq, hosted data for the Central Intelligence Agency, indexed the National Security Agencys vast intelligence databases, built military robots, co-launched a spy satellite with the Pentagon, and leased its cloud computing platform to help police departments predict crime. Amazon, Facebook, Microsoft and the other tech giants are thoroughly intertwined with the military-industrial and security complex.

Criminalization of the poor, racially oppressed, immigrants, refugees and other vulnerable communities is the most clear-cut method of accumulation by repression. This type of criminalization activates legitimate state repression to enforce the accumulation of capital, whereby the state turns to private capital to carry out repression against those criminalized.

There has been a rapid increase in imprisonment in countries around the world, led by the United States, which has been exporting its own system of mass incarceration. In 2019, it was involved in the prison systems of at least 33 different countries, while the global prison population grew by 24 percent from 2000 to 2018. This carceral state opens up enormous opportunities at multiple levels for militarized accumulation. Worldwide, there were in the early 21st century some 200 privately operated prisons on all continents and many more public-private partnerships that involved privatized prison services and other forms of for-profit custodial services such as privatized electronic monitoring programs. The countries that were developing private prisons ranged from most member states of the European Union, to Israel, Russia, Thailand, Hong Kong, South Africa, New Zealand, Ecuador, Australia, Costa Rica, Chile, Peru, Brazil and Canada.

Those criminalized include millions of migrants and refugees around the world. Repressive state controls over the migrant and refugee population and criminalization of non-citizen workers makes this sector of the global working class vulnerable to super-exploitation and hyper-surveillance. In turn, this self-same repression in and of itself becomes an ever more important source of accumulation for transnational capital. Every phase in the war on migrants and refugees has become a wellspring of profit making, from private, for-profit migrant jails and the provision of services inside them such as health care, food, phone systems, to other ancillary activities of the deportation regime, such as government contracting of private charter flights to ferry deportees back home, and the equipping of armies of border agents.

Undocumented immigrants constitute the fastest-growing sector of the U.S. prison population and are detained in private migrant jails and deported by private companies contracted out by the U.S. state. As of 2010, there were 270 immigration jails in the U.S. that caged on any given day over 30,000 immigrants and annually locked up some 400,000 individuals, compared to just a few dozen people in immigrant detention each day prior to the 1980s. From 2010 to 2018, federal spending on these detentions jumped from $1.8 billion to $3.1 billion. Given that such for-profit prison companies as CoreCivic and GEO Group are traded on the Wall Street stock exchange, investors from anywhere around the world may buy and sell their stock, and in this way, develop a stake in immigrant repression quite removed from, if not entirely independent, of the more pointed political and ideological objectives of this repression.

In the United States, the border security industry was set to double in value from $305 billion in 2011 to some $740 billion in 2023. Mexican researcher Juan Manuel Sandoval traces how the U.S.-Mexico border region has been reconfigured into a global space for the expansion of transnational capital. This global space is centered on the U.S. side around high-tech military and aerospace related industries, military bases, and the deploying of other civilian and military forces for combating immigration, drug trafficking, and terrorism through a strategy of low-intensity warfare. On the Mexican side, it involves the expansion of maquiladoras (sweatshops), mining and industry in the framework of capitalist globalization and North American integration.

The tech sector in the United States has become heavily involved in the war on immigrants as Silicon Valley plays an increasingly central role in the expansion and acceleration of arrests, detentions and deportations. As their profits rise from participation in this war, leading tech companies have in turn pushed for an expansion of incarceration and deportation of immigrants, and lobbied the state to use their innovative social control and surveillance technologies in anti-immigrant campaigns.

In Europe, the refugee crisis and EUs program to secure borders has provided a bonanza to military and security companies providing equipment to border military forces, surveillance systems and information technology infrastructure. The budget for the EU public-private border security agency, Frontex, increased a whopping 3,688 percent between 2005 and 2016, while the European border security market was expected to nearly double, from some $18 billion in 2015 to approximately $34 billion in 2022.

As stock markets around the world began to plummet starting in late February, mainstream commentators blamed the coronavirus for the mounting crisis. But the virus was only the spark that ignited the financial implosion. The plunge in stock markets suggests that for some time to come, financial speculation will be less able to serve as an outlet for over-accumulated capital. When the pandemic comes to an end, we will be left with a global economy even more dependent on militarized accumulation than before the virus hit.

We must remember that accumulation by war, social control and repression is driven by a dual logic of providing outlets for over-accumulated capital in the face of stagnation, and of social control and repression as capitalist hegemony breaks down. The more the global economy comes to depend on militarization and conflict, the greater the drive to war and the higher the stakes for humanity. There is a built-in war drive to the current course of capitalist globalization. Historically, wars have pulled the capitalist system out of crisis while they have also served to deflect attention from political tensions and problems of legitimacy. Whether or not a global police state driven by the twin imperatives of social control and militarized accumulation becomes entrenched is contingent on the outcome of the struggles raging around the world among social and class forces and their competing political projects.

This article draws on the authors forthcoming book, The Global Police State, which will be released by Pluto Press in July 2020.

See the original post here:

Beyond the Economic Chaos of Coronavirus Is a Global War Economy - Truthout

Ruthless Mexican cartel led by DEA’s most-wanted fugitive is "taking over everywhere" – CBS News

Mexico's fastest-rising cartel, the Jalisco New Generation gang, has a reputation for ruthlessness and violence unlike any since the fall of the old Zetas cartel. In parts of the country it is fighting medieval-style battles, complete with fortified redoubts, to expand nationwide, from the outskirts of Mexico City, into the tourist resorts around Cancun, and along the northern border.

Last week, U.S. law enforcement authorities announced the arrest of hundreds of people in an operation targeting the cartel. The Justice Department and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) said that the joint operation, known as Project Python, resulted in more than 600 arrests and 350 indictments on the state and federal level, officials said.

But Jalisco has continued to assert itself with brazen methods. U.S. prosecutors said its operatives tried to buy belt-fed M-60 machine guns in the United States, and once brought down a Mexican military helicopter with a rocket-propelled grenade.

But Jalisco is also mounting a propaganda campaign, using videos and social media to threaten rivals while promising civilians that it won't prey on them with extortion and kidnappings. It is a promise that cartels in Mexico have long made, and always broken. But Jalisco's onslaught is so powerful that the cartel appears to have convinced some Mexicans, especially those who are tired of local gangs, to accept control by one large, powerful cartel.

"It seems like the Jalisco New Generation group is taking over everywhere," said a priest in the western city of Apatzingan. "It seems like they allow people to work, and they don't prey on civilians, they don't kidnap, they don't steal vehicles, they just go about their drug business."

The priest, who is not being identified to prevent reprisals, would rather not have any gang in town. But one of his parishioners was recently kidnapped, raped and killed by members of a local gang, the Viagras, even after her family paid a ransom; locals are so sick of that gang they'd rather have anybody else move in.

He is not the only one. A restaurant owner in the central state of Guanajuato - where Jalisco is fighting for control with the local Santa Rosa de Lima gang - says he would prefer that Jalisco take over, because of the local gang's chaotic ways.

"Things are quieter when Jalisco is around," said the restaurant owner, who also asked his name not be used.

A woman who has lived for years under Jalisco cartel rule in a small town says she seeks out local Jalisco enforcers to solve common crime problems. "If you have a problem, you go to them. They solve it quickly," she said.

It is all a lie, albeit one that the cartel likes to repeat.

"Beautiful people, continue your routine," the cartel said in a banner hung from an overpass in 2019 to reassure residents of Apatzingan, Michoacn, that the cartel was moving in to kick out the Viagras. Beneath and around the banner a total of 19 corpses hung from ropes, lay piled on the roadway or were scattered, hacked to pieces.

Sofia Huett, the head security official in the central state of Guanajuato, has been on the receiving end of what she calls a propaganda war between Jalisco and the Santa Rosa gang.

"What is striking is the propaganda campaign in all media. What we are seeing today, we haven't seen" since Mexico's 2006-2012 drug war, she said, referring to decapitation videos, threats, and social media messages warning people to stay indoors.

"This propaganda doesn't just seek to intimidate rivals, but the whole population, as well," she said. "I would even say there may be political goals behind this type of messages."

To those lured by the promises of the cartel, Huett said: "We cannot leave the public in doubt about the criminals, these false promises of protection and these false promises of well-being. This always ends badly."

Indeed, the reality of life under the Jalisco cartel is terrifying: the cartel has made the city of Guadalajara and surrounding suburbs into a giant clandestine grave site.

Hundreds of bodies have been found in the last year, dumped in drainage canals, buried in fields and the patios and yards of homes. Bodies have been found dissolved in acid or lye, bodies have been found in plastic bags. So many bodies have been found in Guadalajara that authorities ran out of space at the morgue and took to moving rotting bodies around in refrigerated trucks until neighbors complained about the smell. Experts say the killings skyrocketed after the cartel lost control of its local organization in Guadalajara, and has been battling that splinter group.

Jalisco is accustomed to attacking law enforcement directly. The cartel is blamed for two of the worst attacks in recent memory: In October, cartel gunmen ambushed and killed 14 state police officers in Michoacn, and there are indications they executed some with gunshots to the head. In 2015, cartel gunmen trying to protect their leader shot down a Mexican military helicopter with an RPG.

Jalisco likes quasi-military tactics, and their hitmen favor military camouflage. In southern Guerrero state, they welded thick armor plating to a truck to make a homemade tank. In many states, they parade around in convoys of dozens of pickup trucks openly marked with the letters "CJNG."

Jalisco really only understands force, a tactic that Mexico's government has sidelined. On Friday, the foreign relations department wrote that the administration of President Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador "is committed to eliminating inequality and violence by ending the war on drugs ... the use of force is no longer the first option."

Indeed, Lpez Obrador said his administration no longer seeks to detain drug lords.

Meanwhile, many of Jalisco's front-line battlegrounds look almost medieval.

On the border between Jalisco and Michoacn states, there is a town called Tepalcatepec, a stronghold of the Viagras that Jalisco has recently tried to take over. The road in from Jalisco - the main route of attack - is blocked with piles of dirt and rocks staggered in a zigzag pattern, forcing incoming vehicles to slow down. From a house on a nearby hill, a vigilante with a .50-caliber sniper rifle scans the road, ready to fire.

Farther south in Michoacn, in the hamlet of El Terrero, Jalisco controls the south bank of the Rio Grande river, while the north bank remains in the hands of the rival New Michoacn Family cartel and its armed wing, the Viagras. The other gangs' terror of Jalisco is evident; in September, they hijacked and burned a half-dozen trucks and buses to block the bridge over the river, to prevent Jalisco convoys from entering in a surprise assault.

Nearby, in the township of San Jose de Chila, rival gangs used a church as an armed redoubt to fight off an offensive by Jalisco gunmen. Holed up in the church tower and from its roof, they tried to defend the town against the incursion, leaving the church filled with bullet holes.

One thing is clear: Jalisco wants people to know that they're in town. They hang banners from overpasses announcing their arrival, offering cash rewards for enemies and threatening police. They post videos on social media, usually with a few dozen heavily-armed, camouflage-clad men with helmets in the background, announcing they have come to "clean up the town."

In Cancun, a man sidles up to a local crime-scene photographer at a taco stand. "We're from Jalisco. We just want you to know that we're here. Enjoy your meal," the man said affably, before walking away.

It wasn't just a boast. On Feb. 29, police in Cancun raided two houses and arrested 10 Jalisco gunmen with assault rifles and caps embroidered with the words "Grupo Delta, CJNG Quintana Roo." The cartel is moving into Cancun the way it often does: the group "was setting up an operational center ... where they abducted and killed members of rival gangs," state prosecutors said.

The cartel has littered the streets of Cancun with the bodies of its victims, but the violence hasn't really hit the tourist zone, except in the resort of Playa del Carmen, to the south.

While extreme violence is hardly new in Mexico, Jalisco is more fearsome than other cartels, more worrisome than even the notorious Zetas, who left piles of as many as 50 bodies on roads, kidnapped hundreds of people and forced them to fight each other to the death with sledgehammers, and burned their victims alive in gasoline drums.

The Zetas were never particularly good at carving out new drug routes or laundering money; Jalisco, with years of experience in methamphetamine production through their allies, the "Cuinis" gang, is in a prime position to capitalize on new synthetic drugs like fentanyl.

"CJNG's efforts to dominate key ports on both the Pacific and Gulf Coasts have allowed it to consolidate important components of the global narcotics supply chain," said a Congressional Research Service report. "In particular, CJNG asserts control over the ports of Veracruz, Manzanillo, and Lzaro Cardenas, which has given the group access to precursor chemicals that flow into Mexico from China and other parts of Latin America. As a result, CJNG has been able to pursue an aggressive growth strategy, underwritten by U.S. demand for Mexican methamphetamine, heroin, and fentanyl."

And the cartel - like its main rival, Sinaloa - has been able to branch out into new regions of the world, turning to India when China cracks down on fentanyl shipments, and establishing connections with Chinese and other Asian gangs to launder drug proceeds that help wealthy Chinese get around their government's currency flow limits and move their wealth abroad.

And under the steely command of Nemesio Oseguera, "El Mencho" - who is now the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's most-wanted fugitive, with a $10 million price on his head - the Jalisco cartel has a more unified leadership than Sinaloa, whose command structure was fractured after the arrest, extradition and conviction of Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman.

Two of El Mencho's children are currently in custody in the U.S. on related drug trafficking charges.

In February, his daughter Jessica Johanna Oseguera Gonzalez, also known as "La Negra," wasarrestedat the federal courthouse in Washington, D.C. She was there to see her brother, Rubn Oseguera Gonzlez or "El Menchito," who was extradited from Mexico and is allegedly CJNG's second in command. A U.S. official told CBS News that she entered the U.S. legally, and Border Patrol agents were apparently unaware she was under indictment.

Now, experts say, much of the violence in Tijuana, Ciudad Juarez and Tamaulipas state is fueled by offensives by the Jalisco cartel, often in alliance with local gangs, to take control of key drug routes.

"They have an almost nationwide presence," said Mexican security analyst Alejandro Hope. "It seems to me they have a more centralized decision-making structure than other criminal groups. The one who calls the shots is Mencho."

Given that Jalisco has moved into hotels and restaurants, shopping centers, real estate companies, agricultural companies, and a music promotion business, Hope said "it appears they are more sophisticated than other (gangs) at laundering money."

Clare Hymes contributed to this report.

Go here to read the rest:

Ruthless Mexican cartel led by DEA's most-wanted fugitive is "taking over everywhere" - CBS News

Ascension-Wisconsin announces drive-thru Covid-19 testing sites – Merrillfotonews

(Wausau, WI) Ascension Medical Group Wisconsin is launching its next wave of drive-through testing locations for COVID-19. Starting Thursday, March 26, drive-through testing sites will be available in Plover, Rhinelander and Crandon. Additional sites are currently in development. Individuals who wish to be tested at drive-through locations must first be pre-screened by an Ascension Medical Group provider by appointment, phone, or virtually using Ascension Online Care.

Those interested in this option for testing should contact their physician office.

This screening involves a series of questions about symptoms, travel history and any potential contact with COVID-19 patients. Patients who meet the criteria, which is based on guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, will schedule an appointment for drive-through testing at the appropriate site.The initial drive-through testing sites going into operation in central and northern Wisconsin are:

All of these drive-through testing locations will be in operation Monday Friday.

At the testing site, patients will remain in their vehicle at all times. An Ascension associate will look up the patients information in the electronic health record to confirm that they have been screened and require testing. Insurance information will be collected for follow-up purposes, if its not already entered into the electronic health record. An Ascension associate will confirm that the patient has an established Ascension provider. There is no upfront charge for the testing.

A throat culture and nasal swab samples will be collected and sent to a state-approved laboratory for analysis. Patients will be provided this information at the time of testing. The specimens collected at Ascension Wisconsins mobile testing sites are currently being sent to Quest and LabCorp. In-house labs at Ascension Wisconsin facilities are in development. This additional testing capacity will allow COVID-19 testing for a wider group of patients.Ascension Medical Group Wisconsin will contact patients with results and positive results will be alerted to the Wisconsin Department of Health.

We continue to collaborate closely with local and state health officials to ensure that community members experiencing symptoms of COVID-19 can be tested for the virus, while limiting exposure to keep the health and safety of our patients, associates and visitors a top priority, said Dr. Stewart Watson, Clinical Vice President of Ascension Medical Group Wisconsins North Region.

According to the CDC, symptoms of COVID-19 can range from mild to severe and may appear 2-14 days after being exposed to the virus. Symptoms seen with the infection with COVID-19 are not specific, with cold-like symptoms in mild cases. Symptoms could include a fever, along with cough and shortness of breath. If someone is elderly or has other medical conditions, such as heart or lung disease, diabetes or cancer, they may get sicker from the virus and develop pneumonia or other lung problems. For more information on COVID-19, please visit cdc.gov.

There also is an Ascension COVID19 Hotline set up for those who have questions about COVID-19, are experiencing symptoms, or those who want to receive a text message to schedule an Ascension Online Care appointment with a provider. The toll-free number for Wisconsin is 1-833-981-0711.

# # #

About Ascension Wisconsin

In Wisconsin, Ascension operates 24 hospital campuses, more than 100 related healthcare facilities and employs more than 1,300 primary and specialty care clinicians from Racine to Eagle River. Serving Wisconsin since 1848, Ascension is a faith-based healthcare organization committed to delivering compassionate, personalized care to all, with special attention to persons living in poverty and those most vulnerable. Ascension is one of the leading non-profit and Catholic health systems in the U.S., operating 2,600 sites of care including 150 hospitals and more than 50 senior living facilities in 20 states and the District of Columbia. Visit http://www.ascension.org.

Follow this link:

Ascension-Wisconsin announces drive-thru Covid-19 testing sites - Merrillfotonews

Ascension and Bronson seeking medical supply donations – Midwest Communication

"Right now, medical professionals across the state are forced to reuse face masks," Governor Whitmer said.

Tuesday, March 24, 2020 5:40 p.m. EDT by Will Kriss

KALAMAZOO, MI (WKZO AM/FM) -- Due to shortages of medical supplies in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak, both Ascension and Bronson hospitals are asking the public for help with donations of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE).

Bronson began accepting donations of this nature Monday. The donations are needed due to what is described as a "critical shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE) and disinfecting supplies nationwide."

The following items will be accepted at five locations:

Bronson cannot accept medication, blankets, toys, clothing or other medical supplies.

In addition to these critical items, Bronson will also accept sewn face masks to conserve supplies. More information on how to do so can be found at this link.

Items that list expiration dates must be unexpired. Officials add that it is essential nobody involved in the distribution or delivery of new/unused materials have any symptoms of COVID-19 (fever, cough, shortness of breath) or have recently been around someone who does.

Bronsonwill collect acceptable new/unused items from businesses, organizations and community members at the following five locations Monday through Friday, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.:

In addition to Bronson needing donations, Ascension West Michigan announced Tuesday that they are in need of medical supply donations as well.

The organization will begin accepting items on March 25 using a drive-through center. The center will be located at Ascension Borgess Hospital Lawrence Education Center, located at 1521 Gull Road in Kalamazoo.

The items requested by Ascension are largely the same as Bronson:

Tuesday, Governor Gretchen Whitmer issued a statement about the shortage of hospital supplies and PPE equipment.

Ourbrave medical professionals and first-responders are on the front lines of keeping us safe,and we must do everything we can to protect them and everyMichigander we can from the spread of COVID-19,Whitmersaid.Right now, medical professionals across the stateare forced to reuse face masks.Thisincreases the risk of spreading COVID-19 during a timewhenwe shoulddo everything we can to mitigate it.Were not getting the tools we need from the federal government, so its on all of us to work together to protect each other.

According to Whitmer's office, several Michigan businesses have begun manufacturing personal protective equipment in the last two weeks. As of Tuesday,Ford, 3M, the UAW, and GE Health Care have announced a partnership to manufacture respirators.

The most up-to-date information about the COVID-19 outbreak can be found athttps://www.michigan.gov/coronavirus/and the CDC website.

Excerpt from:

Ascension and Bronson seeking medical supply donations - Midwest Communication

Ascension Wisconsin to begin offering drive-through COVID-19 testing at six sites – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ascension Wisconsin plans to begin drive-through testing for COVID-19, starting with six sites in southeastern Wisconsin.(Photo: Jen Steele / Journal Sentinel)

Ascension Wisconsin said Monday that ithas begun offering drive-through testing for COVID-19at six sites in southeastern Wisconsinfor people who have been pre-screened and approved to be tested.

The siteswill be open by appointment only from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., according to the news release. The testing will be overseen by the AscensionMedical Group Wisconsin.

People who want to be tested must be pre-screened by a physician or other clinician with Ascension Medical Group, by phone or virtually.

Virtual, or video, visitsare available through Ascension Online Care.

Patients who meet the criteria based on guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will be given an appointment for drive-through testing.

Live Updates:The latest on coronavirus in Wisconsin

Daily Digest:What you need to know about coronavirus in Wisconsin

MoreCoverage:Coronavirus in the U.S and around the world

On Friday, Aurora Health Care suspended its plansfor drive-through testing sites because of a national shortage of testing supplies.

Aurora was limiting testing to patients who met the two highest tiers in the state guidelines. Those include patients who are hospitalized or who have had exposure to a confirmed COVID-19 patient as well as health care workers with unexplained fever and symptoms of a lower-respiratory tract illness.

The health system had planned to operate a drive-throughsite at Aurora St. Luke's Medical Center in Milwaukee, followed by one at Aurora BayCare Medical Center in Green Bay.

Ascension Wisconsin is sending specimens toQuest Diagnostics and LabCorp to be processed but hopes to have in-house labs to process its own tests soon,Patricia Golden, a physician and the primary care medical director of Ascension Medical Group Wisconsin, said in a statement.Theadditional capacity will allow COVID-19 testing for a wider group of patients.

This will enable the health system to test patients with chronic diseases, such as diabetes, who are among the most vulnerable to the disease.

The testing sites are:

Additional locations will be opened later this week in Brookfield, Milwaukee, Stevens Point, Rhinelander and Crandon. Those include drive-through sites atAscension St. Joseph hospital andAscension Elmbrook hospital in Brookfield.

Patients will remain in their vehicles at the testing site and an Ascension employee will check the patients'information in the electronic health record to confirm that they have been screened.There is no upfront cost for testing, but patients will be asked to provide insurance information if it is not in the patients records.

Health insurersand Medicarehave committed to waiving the cost of the tests for people in their health plans.

Ascension Wisconsin also hasset up a hotline for people who have questions about COVID-19, are experiencing symptoms or want to receive a text message to schedule an Ascension Online Care appointment with a provider. The number is 1-833-981-0711.

Read or Share this story: https://www.jsonline.com/story/money/business/health-care/2020/03/24/ascension-wisconsin-begin-drive-through-covid-19-testing-coronavirus/2902258001/

Visit link:

Ascension Wisconsin to begin offering drive-through COVID-19 testing at six sites - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Drive-Thru Donation Site Launches At Ascension Health – CBS Detroit

WARREN, Mich. (CBS DETROIT) In response to generous community outreach and in anticipation of caring for an increasing number of coronavirus (COVID-19) patients, starting Wednesday, Ascension Southeast Michigan hospitals will have a drive-through donation site for personal protective equipment open at its Corporate Services Building located at 28000 Dequindre in Warren.

The donation box is located at the center building entrance facing Dequindre under the portico. Donations will be able to be accepted Monday-Friday from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Saturday, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Supplies being accepted for donation include:

The safety of our patients, care teams and the community is our top priority as we all work to slow thetransmission of coronavirus (COVID-19) and care for all those in need. Ascension Michigan will alwaysfollow the most current Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines regarding the use of personal protective equipment. We are accepting donations from businesses and members of the community as a precautionary measure for unpredictable circumstances as we work to contain thespread of COVID-19.

2020 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

See more here:

Drive-Thru Donation Site Launches At Ascension Health - CBS Detroit

Ascension temporarily stopping in-person visitation – WAOW

Beginning March 21, Ascension Hospitals will be temporarily stopping in-person visitations, however there will be some exceptions made on a case-by-case basis.

Exceptions will include labor and delivery, neonatal intensive care and end-of-life-care.

Ascension is implementing the no in-person visitation restrictions as a continued attempt to try and limit the chance of exposure to COVID-19 by both patients and employees.

In a statement released by Ascension they stated,

"We understand that during this time it is important to stay connected to loved ones and remain aware of their status while hospitalized. We encourage any potential visitors to use alternate methods of communication to stay in contact with loved ones, such as calling, video chatting, or texting."

The hospital is recommending staying in contact through virtual visitation. Suggesting that both patient and potential visitor download apps like, Facetime, Google Hangout and Skype.

Additional changes to Ascension's restricted visitation policy include:

There is no current time-frame for when this policy will be lifted.

Read more from the original source:

Ascension temporarily stopping in-person visitation - WAOW

Ascension Via Christi and Wamego Health Center welcome to supply donations – WIBW

MANHATTAN, Kan. (WIBW) - Ascension Via Christi in Manhattan and the Wamego Health Center are asking for the communities help with donations of masks, gloves, gowns, and shoe covers, as well as continued monetary support.

During this coronavirus pandemic, a list of supplies that could be donated by community members as a way to continue to support both facilities was released.

Some of the items could be items in your home, like nitrile gloves, and sanitization wipes, which can also be used in the medical setting.

The facilities say they will take donations of homemade fabric masks, but they ask that you make them with three layers of cotton fabric only, and can have ear-loop elastics or fabric tie-backs.

Please do not add a layer of polypropylene to the mask, as it will disintegrate in the sterilization process the masks must go through before use.

For those who want to support Ascension Via Christi and Wamego Health Center, but do not have supplies to donate, monetary contributions are also welcome for both facilities.

We can't do this alone, its going to take a community effort and we are so very thankful for you thinking of those in healthcare. Mercy Community Health Foundation and Wamego Health Foundation, Development Director, Tina Rockhold says.

For more information on where to drop off supplies, contact Tina Rockhold at tina.rockhold@ascension.org.

To make monetary donations, please visit click the name of the facility you would like to donate to: Mercy Community Health Foundation in Manhattan or Wamego Community Health Foundation in Wamego.

Read the original here:

Ascension Via Christi and Wamego Health Center welcome to supply donations - WIBW

Deserted and desolate, Ascension residents heed stay-at-home order – WBRZ

ASCENSION PARISH - Congested clusters of fast-growing Ascension Parish remained extraordinarily deserted Tuesday as residents listened to Governor John Bel Edwards' stay-at-home order to avoid getting sick. The order took effect 5 p.m. Monday.Cases of coronavirus jumped by 10, from 26 to 36, in Ascension on Tuesday. There is one reported death.Highway 73 near I-10 in Prairieville is one of the most congested areas during peak times, but Tuesday the roads were empty as most people stayed home.In Gonzales, the Tanger Outlet Mall is usually bustling with savvy shoppers looking for bargains, but the parking lots were bare.Some residents are worried about family members and children getting sick, but others say they're not worried or taking any additional precautions.

Same ol' deal, one woman said.Monday, a cluster of five cases were found at a nursing home in Donaldsonville. Tuesday, Donaldsonville Mayor Leroy Sullivan said he heard rumors about cases at the nursing home all weekend long, but learned firsthand about the confirmed cases after reading a WBRZ report.Nursing home leaders said there were no additional cases as of Tuesday afternoon at the facility. However, they said they are continuing to work with the CDC, along with the state, for assistance.

Read more from the original source:

Deserted and desolate, Ascension residents heed stay-at-home order - WBRZ

Ascension sets up first COVID-19 drive-thru test sites – Journal Times

RACINE COUNTY Ascension Medical Group Wisconsin is developing drive-through testing sites for COVID-19, the organization announced Thursday afternoon. The first three are in Franklin, West Allis and Milwaukee, but Ascension is not publicly announced exact testing site locations.

Individuals who wish to be tested must first be prescreened by an Ascension Medical Group provider, by phone, or virtually using Ascension Online Care. For Racine County residents, they would then be directed to the nearest testing site, in Franklin.

We are working diligently with local and state health officials to operationalize these sites as quickly as possible to keep the health and safety of the communities we're privileged to serve a top priority, an Ascension spokeswoman stated.

The screening involves answering a series of questions about symptoms, travel history and any potential contact with COVID-19 patients. Patients who meet the criteria, which is based on guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, will be given an appointment for drive-through testing at the appropriate site.

There also is an Ascension COVID-19 Hotline set up for those who have questions about COVID-19, are experiencing symptoms, or those who want to receive a text message to schedule an Ascension Online Care appointment with a provider. The toll-free number for Wisconsin is 1-833-981-0711.

Sign up now to get the most recent coronavirus headlines and other important local and national news sent to your email inbox daily.

Read more here:

Ascension sets up first COVID-19 drive-thru test sites - Journal Times

Ascension assessor closes offices, beefs up online presence – The Advocate

GONZALES Ascension Parish Assessor M.J. "Mert" Smiley Jr. has closed his offices until further notice to comply with local and state guidelines aimed at limiting the spread of the novel coronavirus.

Earlier this month, the assessor ended walk-in traffic at his offices. Now employees will be working from home but answering the office telephone numbers Monday to Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., the assessor said in a statement Wednesday.

Over the past several years, the assessor said, he has upgraded his office's systems so they operate more easily online and recently added a new website application for homestead exemptions. The Assessor's Office website has a new tab for the applications, the statement says.

The new online form integrates into the Assessor's Office's existing "paperless workflow system for review and approval, which makes the entire process completely electronic," the statement says.

"Our thoughts and prayers continue to remain with those needing healing from the Coronavirus and for everyones protection from this virus," Smiley said in a statement.

The office numbers are (225) 647-8182 and (225) 473-9293. Callers can leave a message after hours. The Assessor's Office website is http://www.ascensionassessor.com

If you have questions about coronavirus, please email our newsroom at online@theadvocate.com.

Success! An email has been sent with a link to confirm list signup.

Error! There was an error processing your request.

Read this article:

Ascension assessor closes offices, beefs up online presence - The Advocate