Monthly Archives: February 2022

For Australian Curler, a Positive Covid Test and Then a Surprise Win – The New York Times

Posted: February 7, 2022 at 6:11 am

Just getting on the ice on Sunday felt like a victory.

Tahli Gill of Australias mixed doubles curling team had her bags packed and a flight booked to return home. Any hopes of finishing her Olympic run had seemingly been dashed by a series of positive coronavirus tests.

Yet, after a whirlwind of developments on Sunday, Gill and her partner, Dean Hewitt, notched Australias first-ever wins in curling. The pair beat Switzerland, 9-6.

I only had time to pull out my uniforms, Gill told reporters after the match, recounting the dizzying turn of events that led to health officials delivering an unexpected reprieve that sent her scrambling to make the game. I only played with one glove!

She had been excluded from her final two matches after a series of positive tests on Saturday, Australian Olympic officials said. Gill had alternated between positive and negative tests in recent days, which she had blamed on the residual effects of contracting the virus in December.

The call came late on Sunday when Chinese officials decided that Gills CT levels, a measure of how much viral material is detected, were within an acceptable range.

It was a sudden turn after Australian Olympic officials said that discussions with the health authorities and the International Olympic Committee went late into Saturday without success. By Sunday, Australian officials said, they were making plans to get Gill and Hewitt home after Gill had been moved into an isolation hotel.

When word started trickling in of a possible reprieve, Hewitt said he was reluctant to believe it. Dont do this to us, please! he said of the tantalizing possibility of returning. Are you serious?

The news was true.

It was just crazy, mate, Hewitt said after the game on Sunday. The excitement in the room was unbelievable.

That excitement, Hewitt said, fueled their play on Sunday. You dont realize what youve got until its gone, he said. The win? That was a bonus.

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4 more Mainers have died and another 1,095 coronavirus cases reported across the state – Bangor Daily News

Posted: at 6:11 am

Fourmore Mainers have died and another 1,095coronavirus cases reported across the state, Maine health officials said Saturday.

Saturdays report brings the total number of coronavirus cases in Maine to 181,010,according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Thats up from 179,915 on Friday.

Of those, 133,351have been confirmed positive, while 47,059were classified as probable cases, the Maine CDC reported.

Three men and a woman have succumbed to the virus, bringing the statewide death toll to 1,804.

Two were from Androscoggin County, one from Kennebec County and one from Somerset County.

Of those, one was 80 or older, two were in their 70s and one in their 60s.

The number of coronavirus cases diagnosed in the past 14 days statewide is 14,112. This is an estimation of the current number of active cases in the state, as the Maine CDC is no longer tracking recoveries for all patients. Thats down from 14,224 on Friday.

The new case rate statewide Saturday was 8.18 cases per 10,000 residents, and the total case rate statewide was 1,352.43.

The most cases have been detected in Mainers younger than 20, while Mainers over 80 years old account for the largest portion of deaths. More cases have been recorded in women and more deaths in men.

So far, 4,019 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus. Of those, 339 are currently hospitalized, with 83 in critical care and 36 on a ventilator. Overall, 47 out of 379 critical care beds and 245 out of 328 ventilators are available.

The total statewide hospitalization rate on Saturday was 30.03 patients per 10,000 residents.

Cases have been reported in Androscoggin (18,232), Aroostook (8,615), Cumberland (37,861), Franklin (4,451), Hancock (5,296), Kennebec (17,441), Knox (4,284), Lincoln (3,815), Oxford (8,849), Penobscot (20,308), Piscataquis (2,274), Sagadahoc (3,776), Somerset (7,610), Waldo (4,473), Washington (3,161) and York (30,592) counties. Information about where an additional two cases were reported wasnt immediately available.

An additional 440 vaccine doses were administered in the previous 24 hours. As of Saturday, 978,717 Mainers are fully vaccinated, or about 76.4 percent of eligible Mainers, according to the Maine CDC.

As of Saturday afternoon, the coronavirus had sickened 76,379,284 people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as caused 901,703 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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Thornton man given 1% survival chance reflects 1-year after COVID hospitalization – The Denver Channel

Posted: at 6:11 am

THORNTON, Colo. It's been nearly two years since the start of the pandemic in Colorado. One man who made a miraculous recovery after contracting the virus is reflecting on the last year.

On February 8, 2021, Jaime Gonzalez-Tolentino was admitted to the hospital during a battle with the virus and was given a 1% chance of survival. Nearly a year later he and his family share this story of a miraculous recovery.

Gonzalez contracted a severe case of the coronavirus in 2021 after suffering a stroke and battling Pneumonia just a few years earlier. He was in a coma, intubated, and put on an ECMO machine that provides heart and lung support. The days in the hospital turned into months.

"They told me, you know, he has a 1% chance. I mean, there was just, they didn't have any hope for him," said Jaime's oldest son, Jesus. "It was hard, especially me being the oldest. And, you know, how are you going to tell your siblings, your younger siblings that his dad is going to, is going to die?"

Despite all odds against them, his family did not lose hope and did what they could to help. Jaime's oldest son suggested a rare steroid treatment. With few options left one doctor agreed to try it.

She took a leap of faith on us because we told her that we were people of faith that we believe God was going be there for us," said Jesus.

On Easter Sunday, April 4, 2021, which also happened to be Jaime's youngest son's birthday, a miracle happened: the dad-of-three woke up after a couple of months in a coma.

Jaime says he remembers that moment, being surrounded by his family and mother. He says seeing their excitement gave him the same feeling and motivation to push forward.

Gonzalez spent exactly 100 days hospitalized before making it home on May 20, 2021. Since then, Jaime has been able to resume his normal life with a few restrictions like having to use an oxygen pack.

He says doctors at his latest appointment have told him that his health is progressing and his lungs are improving. His message to those who hear his story is, "Life is beautiful and is something that should be enjoyed by everyone."

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New US$3.75 million Grant to Help Palestinians Fight the Coronavirus Outbreak and Future Health Shocks – occupied Palestinian territory – ReliefWeb

Posted: at 6:11 am

Jerusalem, February 6, 2022- An additional grant of US$3.75 million was allocated to the ongoing West Bank and Gaza COVID-19 Emergency Response. The additional financing will continue to support the Palestinian Authority's response to the threat posed by the COVID-19 pandemic while ensuring continuity of essential health services and contributing to long-term resilience.

The grant will be contributed from the Health Emergency Preparedness and Response (HEPR) Multi-donor Trust Fund administered by the World Bank. It is a flexible mechanism for rapid financing to support countries and territories to improve their capacities to prepare for, prevent, respond to, and mitigate the impact of epidemics on populations.

"*COVID-19 continues to pose a high risk of morbidity and mortality, as well as a burden to healthcare systems. Due to low capacity of testing in the Palestinian territories, the number of COVID-19 cases are underestimated. Still, the numbers of new infections reported daily continue to reach new highs. The additional financing will support the original project by providing immediate response to COVID-19, but also contributing to long-term resilience,*" said Kanthan Shankar, World Bank Country Director for West Bank and Gaza.

Beyond strengthening the overall healthcare services and clinical capacity in immediate response to COVID-19 under the framework of the parent project, the new grant focuses on procuring supplies and equipment that could be utilized to promote resilience to future pandemics and health shocks. These include medicines for the treatment of health emergencies and chronic conditions as well as emergency medical devices and equipment including defibrillators, vital-signs monitors, emergency trolleys, patient beds, mobile blood banks, ultrasound machines, generators, and more.

The operation will also seek to reduce limitations to access to healthcare experienced by rural and marginalized communities. For instance, women in remote areas often find it difficult to access health services due to distance to health facilities and lack of transportation. Mobile clinics financed through the additional financing will ensure equitable access to quality care for populations that are often left behind. The World Bank will continue to strengthen resilience and pandemic preparedness in the health system through technical and operational engagement with the Ministry of Health and other partners in the sector.

Mary Koussa

+(972) 2-2366500

mkoussa@worldbank.org

Serene Jweied

+1 (202) 473-8764

sjweied@worldbankgroup.org

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COVID-19: Cambridge professor admits he was ‘over-optimistic’ at the start of the coronavirus pandemic – Sky News

Posted: at 6:11 am

A statistician has said he was "overly-optimistic" at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Professor Sir David Spiegelhalter, chairman of the Winton Centre for Risk of Evidence Communication at Cambridge University confessed he "didn't take it seriously enough".

He added that he had a naturally optimistic personality "and that's why I'm very glad I'm not a government adviser".

"The pandemic has been a net lifesaver for younger people, if you look at people between 15 and 30 in 2020, 300 fewer died than would normally have died and that includes the 100 that died from COVID sadly," Sir David said.

"So that's 300 fewer families mourning the death of a young person because of the pandemic.

"Now that's because young people were essentially locked up, they couldn't go out driving fast, they couldn't go out and get drunk, and they couldn't get into fights and whatever, and so all these lives were saved."

However, the professor said that this doesn't necessarily mean he advocates for lockdowns, because "on the flip side of that you have a big increase in mental health problems".

Sir David, who has been a regular commentator on the pandemic, admitted he had an "optimistic" disposition during the pandemic.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, he said: "I think it's very important that we have to acknowledge that we can never take an objective view about evidence, we always bring our, I think, personalities into it, and mine is unfortunately very optimistic and that's why I'm very glad I'm not a government adviser, I don't think I'd be very good at it because I do tend to hope for the best and sort of expecting the best as well.

"I was terribly over-optimistic at the start of the pandemic and didn't take it seriously enough."

'Could he have been caught earlier?'

Sir David was knighted in 2014 for services to medical statistics, including leading the statistical team for the public inquiry into high rates of deaths among babies following heart surgery at Bristol Royal Infirmary.

He also discussed his work as an expert witness to the public inquiry into serial killer doctor Harold Shipman.

Shipman was jailed for life in January 2000 for murdering 15 patients while working in Manchester but official predictions are that he killed between 215-260 people during a 23-year-period in West Yorkshire.

He said: "I was part of the team that was asked to say 'well, could he have been caught earlier if people had been looking at the data?'.

"We looked at the statistical methods that were used in industrial quality control, where you monitor whether a process is going out of kilter by seeing whether you're getting more failures than you would expect and, in Harold Shipman's case, it was looking for when more people were dying in his practice than you would expect.

"And we adapted the methods used in industrial quality control and showed that, actually Shipman could have been caught much earlier and if someone had been looking at the data and had blown the whistle you might have been able to save 200 lives."

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How New York Citys Hospitals Withstood the Omicron Surge – The New York Times

Posted: at 6:11 am

The test kits alone, the city estimated, caught 25,000 cases. School attendance hovered around 70 percent in early January, as children were out sick or kept home by their parents to try to avoid infection.

While Omicron often causes milder illness in adults, it sometimes has a more severe impact on children, particularly those too young to be vaccinated, creating new challenges for health care workers. Hospitalization rates for children rose more quickly than in previous waves, mirroring trends elsewhere.

Still, of the 181 children that Cohen Childrens Medical Center in Queens admitted with Covid-19 in the recent wave, only one, an unvaccinated 17-year-old boy, died, a spokesman said. From Jan. 1 to Jan. 27, three children under 18 died of Covid-19 in the city, bringing the citys total death toll in that age group during the pandemic to 32, according to data from the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Although Omicron is receding quickly, the wave is not totally gone. There were 2,633 people with Covid-19 in city hospitals on Feb. 2, fewer than half than at the Omicron peak, but still more than four times as many as before the variant was first detected in December.

Even with the numbers declining, medical workers on the front lines say staffing shortages remain acute.

At SUNY Downstate, employees from across departments pitched in when the emergency room was taking in four times its regular number of patients in early January. Vaccines and new treatments helped limit severe cases. But there were too many patients flooding the entire health system at once to load balance, or transfer patients, between Downstate and other hospitals that were also being hit hard.

Still, strategies that had been developed after earlier waves helped, said Patricia A. Winston, the hospitals senior vice president for operations. Those included regular check-in calls with state and city officials and the Greater New York Hospital Association, a trade group that followed the situation across medical centers.

Before, it was like, you were in this by yourself, Ms. Winston said. Now you talk to each other and work together and figure out how to strategize. Even if you cant move somebody, you have someone to talk to.

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Australia to open borders to vaccinated tourists on February 21 – Al Jazeera English

Posted: at 6:11 am

Australia will reopen its borders to fully vaccinated tourists from February 21, Prime Minister Scott Morrison has announced, ending some of the worlds strictest and longest-running pandemic travel restrictions.

Its almost two years since we took the decision to close the borders to Australia, Morrison said during a media briefing on Monday.

If youre double vaccinated, we look forward to welcoming you back to Australia.

Australia shut its borders in March 2020 to protect itself against a surging COVID-19 pandemic.

For most of the time since then, Australians have been barred from leaving and only a handful of visitors have been granted exemptions to enter.

The rules have split families, hammered the countrys large tourist industry and prompted sometimes acrimonious debates about Australias status as a modern, open and outward-looking nation.

With the rollout of its vaccination programme last year, Morrisons government has slowly relaxed the rules for Australians, long-term residents and students.

Mondays decision will see almost all remaining caps lifted.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) said it greatly welcomed the move.

The Asia Pacific region has been very cautious in its approach to border restrictions so far but in recent weeks, we have seen growing momentum towards relaxation of travel restrictions in the Philippines, Thailand, and to some extent New Zealand, Philip Goh, IATAs Regional Vice President for Asia Pacific said in a statement.

We urge other governments in the Asia Pacific to look at similarly further easing their border restrictions so as to enable aviation businesses to accelerate their much needed recovery and to bring maximum benefits to their economies.

Tim Soutphommasane, a professor of sociology at the University of Sydney, Australia, said the reopening of borders meant Australia can re-engage with the world. But challenges remain, he cautioned.

We may be seeing the beginning of the end for Fortress Australia, but psychologically the country still has some way to go, Soutphommasane told Al Jazeera.

The pandemic has seen Australia retreat into seeing itself as a sanctuary, sheltered from the rest of the world. With a highly vaccinated population, Australia should be confident about reopening. But there is still a lot of caution and anxiety, with the country still learning to live alongside the virus.

For most of the pandemic, Australia pursued what it called a COVID-zero policy that included strict snap lockdowns. But it abandoned the policy after rolling out vaccines.

Some 79 percent of Australias population has now received two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine, and the country has pushed ahead with easing curbs even as the Omicron variant began to drive up infections.

The past week has seen a slowdown in daily infections and hospital admissions, with Australia reporting just over 23,000 new cases on Monday.

The figure marks the lowest daily case count this year and is well below the peak of 150,000 about a month ago.

Approximately 2.4 million cases have been recorded since the first Omicron case was detected in Australia in November. Until then, Australia had counted about 200,000 cases.

Some 4,248 people in Australia have died from the virus since the pandemic began.

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Prominent Christian doctor claims COVID vaccines will turn people into transhumanist cyborgs – LGBTQ Nation

Posted: February 5, 2022 at 5:58 am

Sherri TenpennyPhoto: via Wikipedia

One of the leaders of the anti-vaccine movement claimed on TV that the goal of the governments response to the COVID-19 pandemic is to make people either chronically sick or turn them into transhumanist cyborgs.

Dr. Sherri Tenpenny of Ohio is an influential source of COVID-19 misinformation, and she has also got a history of anti-LGBTQ statements, especially about transgender people. She has been using the prestige of her medical degree to push wacky COVID theories like that the vaccines make people magnetic and sell detox products to her gullible followers for years.

Related: One of Americas biggest televangelists died of COVID-19 after his alternative treatments failed

She is especially influential on the religious right. She appeared on The Stew Peters Show, a show that calls people who get vaccinated shot goblins and claims that the vaccines will result in American killing fields.

The stated goal is to depopulate the planet and the ones that are left, either make them chronically sick or turn them into transhumanist cyborgs that can be manipulated externally by 5G, by magnets, by all sorts of things, Tenpenny said on the program.

She did not explain what exactly a transhumanist cyborg is, but she has attacked transgender people in the past, including making jokes at the expense of transgender peoples identities and implying Pope Francis works for an LGBTQ cabal.

Tenpenny got national attention last year for her claim in front of the Ohio House that the COVID vaccines make people magnetic, but she told Stew Peters that she was somehow proved right.

I got dragged through the mud by the mainstream media when I said that in May of last year in front of the House committee in Columbus, she said. Well, guess what? Its all true.

The whole issue of quantum entanglement and how what the shots do in terms of the frequencies and the electronic frequencies that come inside of your body and hook you up to the Internet of Things, the quantum entanglement that happens immediately after youre injected, she continued. You get hooked up to what theyre trying to develop, its called the hive mind, and they want all of us there as a node and as an electronic avatar that is an exact replica of us except its an electronic replica, its not our God-given body that we were born with.

And all of that will be running through the metaverse that theyre talking about. All of these things are real, Stew. All of them. And its happening right now. Its not some science fiction thing happening out in the future; its happening right now in real time.

Tenpenny ranone of the 12 Twitter accounts where 65% of COVID-19 misinformation originated, according to the Center for Countering Digital Hate, before she got banned from the platform last year for spreading COVID misinformation.

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When the Pope Hits Your Eye Like a Big Pizza Pie, That’s Ahmari – Tablet Magazine

Posted: at 5:58 am

I first met Sohrab Ahmari, one of the most influential and controversial writers on the American right, a little over a decade ago, during the secular neoconservative phase of his dizzying ideological pilgrimage from Marxist atheism to Catholic post-liberal neo-traditionalism. An intellectually restless law student, Ahmari aspired to a career in journalism, and a mutual frienda human rights activist, as it happenedintroduced us.

Like many immigrants to this country, Ahmari, who was born in Iran, had a way of making you feel obscenely lucky to be born an American, and that you should never take it for granted. The first things that struck me about him were his infectious optimism and seemingly old-world civility. This was about a year after the birth of the Green Movement, when millions of Iranians, mostly our age at the time, poured into the streets to protest the regimes fraudulent presidential election. Ahmari was an eloquent advocate for their democratic aspirations. Though we came from very different backgroundshe, the product of a broken home and a refugee from an Islamic theocracy; I, the son of upper-middle-class Jewish professionals in the most hospitable country Jews have ever knownwe shared a love for the written word and the freedom that America represented.

I connected Ahmari to a few editors, but cant take any credit for his subsequent rise, which has been dramatic. Not long after we met, he co-edited a collection of essays by dissidents from across the Middle East, Arab Spring Dreams: The Next Generation Speaks Out for Freedom and Justice from North Africa to Iran, which included a piece by a gay Moroccan man compelled to mourn his lovers suicide in secret, and for which Ahmari managed to snag a foreword from Gloria Steinem. Around this time, Ahmari joined The Wall Street Journal editorial page, based first in New York and then in London, a perch he used to skewer authoritarians and bolster embattled democrats around the world. While in Britain, Ahmari converted to Catholicism, which he announced publicly in the summer of 2016 after the gruesome murder of a French priest by Islamists in Normandy. Id recently started to notice a more pious bent in Ahmaris writings, and given what I knew of his universalist commitments, this development (which he later recounted in a thoughtful memoir) did not come as a particular surprise. The following year, I attended the baptism of his first child.

When Donald Trump descended onto the political scene in a fit of nativist and isolationist bluster, Ahmari was exactly where I expected him to be. In the summer of 2016, he published a cover story for Commentary, Illiberalism: The Worldwide Crisis, which diagnosed a transnational, cross-ideological tendency distinguished by, among other things, an impatience with norms and procedural niceties; a tendency toward populist leader-worship; and skepticism toward international treaties and institutions, such as NATO, that provide the scaffolding for the U.S.-led postwar order. Ahmari included Trump alongside other practitioners of such politics like Russian President Vladimir Putin, the xenophobic French National Front leader Marine Le Pen, and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbn. The following year, after Trumps shock election victory, and by then a Commentary senior writer, Ahmari published another cover story titled, The Terrible American Turn Toward Illiberalism, in which he presciently decried the perils of conspiracism and romantic politics on both sides of the U.S. political spectrum, but especially among his fellow conservatives. Beginning when Trump clinched the GOP nomination last year, he lamented, a great deal of conservative thinking has amounted to:You did X to us, now enjoy it as we dish it back to you and then some.

Like other right-of-center Trump critics, Ahmari hoped to join a broad, bipartisan coalition committed to defending basic liberal values at home and abroad from the whims of a president who threatened to undermine both. But as what should have been a loyal opposition hardened into an often unethical and perpetually panic-stricken resistance, it became harder for self-respecting, intellectually consistent, anti-Trump conservatives to be the team players that their left-of-center peers demanded. In particular, the unscrupulous behavior of Senate Democrats and the media during the Brett Kavanaugh nomination battle, and the cynical promotion of the Russia collusion narrative, put Ahmari in the position of defending Trump from the hysterical excesses of his adversaries, a cause he would take up with gusto after leaving Commentary in 2018 to become editor of the New York Post op-ed page.

Now at a more populist, pugilistic media outlet than the Journal or Commentary (and one that had endorsed Trump in 2016), Ahmaris targets shifted. Rather than fight an increasingly lonely battle against the enemies of liberal values on both right and left, Ahmari quite rapidly transmogrified into a partisan supporter of the president, in turn appearing to renounce the ideals that had, until quite recently, been his lodestar. He has since become representative of a new intellectual and political redoubt on the American right, one that is fundamentally pessimistic about the country, its people, its values, and its role in the world, imbuing his dizzying personal odyssey of the last 10 years with a broader cultural salience.

In March 2019, the conservative Catholic journal First Things published an open letter that Ahmari helped draft. Titled Against the Dead Consensus, it looked favorably on Trumps takeover of the Republican Party, lambasted consensus conservatives for fetishizing individual autonomy, and condemned other aspects of tyrannical liberalism such as the transhumanist project of radical self-identification. Two months later, Ahmari went further. In Against David French-ism, also published in First Things, he singled out the even-keeled, evangelical political commentator as just the sort of spineless conservative unsuitable to the depth of the present crisis facing religious conservatives. (As the titles of his First Things manifestos suggest, Ahmari had become motivated more by his animosities than his passions.)

As Ahmari defined it, David French-ism is a posture of political engagement too polite, guileless, and respectful of a nonexistent neutral public square for our current predicament, which demands nothing less than an acceptance of politics as war and enmity. Engaged in existential struggle with autonomy-maximizing liberalism, American conservatism could no longer afford to be Burkean, soberly defending the accomplishments of civilization from revolutionary progressivism. Desperate times call for desperate measures, and conservatives must answer the call by becoming revolutionists themselves, harnessing the power of the state to fight mercilessly for a public square re-ordered to the common good and ultimately the Highest Good.

What incited Ahmaris broadside against French, and what led him to embrace the very impatience with norms and procedural niceties he had warned against just three years earlier, was not the sort of event that future historians are likely to identify as having clearly distinguished an old political era from a new one, like Pearl Harbor or 9/11 or the murder of George Floyd. Ahmari was perusing Facebook one day when he came upon an ad for a drag queen reading hour at a public library in Sacramento. Organized by private organizations across the country, drag queen reading hours are what they sound like: drag queens reading childrens books aloud to children. More than just exposing youth to different forms of beauty, performance, and experience, it dispels the stigma and stereotypes of predation and lechery that are so often and unfortunately projected onto LGBTQ youth workers, is how one participant described the program. And it does so in such an innocent, playful, and positive way. Its a beautiful thing.

Ahmari expressed his disgust on his popular Twitter feed: If you cant see why children belong nowhere near drag, with its currents of transvestic fetishism, we have nothing to say to each other, he tweeted. We are irreconcilably opposed. Theres no polite, David French-ian third way around the cultural civil war. The only way is through. Ahmari singled out French for abuse because French, who, before becoming a journalist had litigated cases for an ecumenical roster of clients on behalf of a conservative religious liberty group, is a prominent advocate of viewpoint-neutral access to public facilities when those facilities are opened up for public use. This is the legal principle that allows, for example, both a private organization to host a drag queen reading hour at a public library in California and a Christian church to host weekend prayer services in public buildings in New York.

No family has ever been forced to send their child to a drag queen reading hour; it was the mere existence of this voluntary event, some 3,000 miles away in Sacramento, that whipped Ahmari into a frenzy.

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Besides the constitutional argument, the French position also represents the broader ethic of pluralism: Just as Ahmari would find it unconscionable for parents in San Francisco to dictate the terms of his childrens education, so they expect noninterference from him. No family has ever been forced to send their child to a drag queen reading hour; it was the mere existence of this voluntary event, some 3,000 miles away in Sacramento, that whipped Ahmari into a frenzy. Never mind that putting a stop to it would require state intervention, thereby junking the First Amendment and its guarantee of free association, which also protects him and his fellow religious conservatives from overweening secularists. This is demonic, Ahmari declared. To hell with liberal order.

Observing Ahmaris breakdown from afar, I felt a pang of guilt. Several years earlier, before his conversion to Catholicism, Id brought him and two other straight friends to a Sunday drag brunch at a restaurant near my home in Washington, D.C. Popular with tourists, the drag brunch is a weekly gay ritual where guests, fueled by bottomless mimosas and Bloody Marys, consume generous helpings of comfort food as drag performers sing and strut around the room. The person at our table who relished the raucous affair most was, by far, Ahmari. Had I mistaken his apparent enjoyment that day for an inner turmoil? Had I helped seed it?

Even understanding that his Catholic conversion would almost certainly lead to a more socially conservative belief system, the nature of Ahmaris attack on French stunned me. It wasnt only that the person Id known to be so unfailingly polite was now embracing public incivility as a positive good. I was also confused by how a drag queen reading Red: A Crayons Story to other peoples children could lead to a wholesale personal and intellectual break.

But homosexuality and nontraditional gender expression are high on the list of fears shared by Ahmari and his fellow travelers on the post-liberal new right. Last year, in his inaugural column for The American Conservative (where he is now a contributing editor), Ahmari explained his trajectory from grateful immigrant convert to the creed of American exceptionalism to a chastened American citizen who now enjoins the leaders of his country to Stop lecturing the world, and for Gods sake, stop trying to remake other societies in your own image. Looking back on his earlier neoconservative political orientation in disbelief, he wondered who could possibly believe such things, but a young opinion journalist with a mind self-marinated in the goopy abstractions of interventionism, nurtured by men like Bret Stephens, who on the day he hired me at the Journaltold me that his ideal vision of freedom was the 82nd Airborne escorting a Pride parade through the streets of Tehran?

Ahmaris self-examination was less notable for the intellectual evolution it tried to convey than for its inadvertent admission that, in the process, hed evidently lost his sense of humor. Ive never worked for Stephens, but I know him well enough to be certain that his comment was a joke. But Ahmariwhom I suspect took it as a joke at the timemust now, from the distance of a decade, take such things literally (if not seriously). Elsewhere in the column, Ahmari derided American leaders for being too busy with LGBTQ rights in Uzbekistan to notice the house is on fire at home.

Ahmari may have a point about the navet of the American foreign policy establishment, but he gives the impression of being preoccupied less with U.S. economic or political failures than with nightmare visions of men in thongs and dykes on bikesthat he is haunted by a fear, as H.L. Mencken defined Puritanism, that someone, somewhere, may be happy.

In his 1981 book Political Pilgrims: Travels of Western Intellectuals to the Soviet Union, China, and Cuba 19281979, the Hungarian-born political scientist Paul Hollander observed that communism enjoyed its greatest popularity among Western intellectuals during the Great Depression, not when its performance was the most impressive or its policies most humane, but at a time when a severe economic crisis buffeted the Western world. Record-high unemployment and poverty at home helped create a perception of the Soviet Union as an island of stability, order, economic rationality, and social justice. Likewise, during the wave of Western intellectual admiration for China and Cuba in the 1960s, the United States was undergoing major social upheaval over civil rights, the sexual revolution, and the Vietnam War. According to Hollander, the intellectual admirers of communism sought a social order in which the individual was free from aimlessness, confusion, and uncertainty such as the intellectuals experienced in their own societies and which are endemic to contemporary, secular, pluralistic societies.

Hollanders subjects were men and women of the left whose disgust at the inequality produced by Western capitalism inspired a search for alternative models in countries where inequality had supposedly been eliminated. They shared an amalgam of alienation and utopia-seeking. But the yearning for a society devoid of aimlessness, confusion, and uncertaintya society, as Ahmari might say, reordered to the common good and ultimately the Highest Goodis not specific to the left. Thirty years after the fall of the Soviet Union, a similar yearning is conspicuous among the post-liberal right, whose veneration of authoritarian regimes islike Hollanders Cold War intellectualsmoving from live-action role-playing to programmatic political ambition.

When I recently asked Ahmari to explain the new rights take on foreign policy, he said it is a belief that America needs retrenchment. There is nothing bad with a power saying we need domestic consolidation for a while. Behind this belief is the sense that America is internally incoherent, internally decaying, and that hawkishness of the kind that certainly I used to subscribe to and I got my entre into the journalistic world through, a kind of secular neoconservatism, that kind of hawkishness not only doesnt address these internal crises but distracts us from our ability to address them. Ahmari pointed to the vast number of underemployed men, fentanyl addiction, and visible social decay as signs that America has become a machine that runs itself without any sense of telos.

Pretty standard fare, except that the alternative model most favored by Ahmari and the new right is, of all places, Hungaryand not the Hungarian system or economy or society per se, but the goulash authoritarianism of its current prime minister, Viktor Orbn. Last summer, Fox News host Tucker Carlson spent a week broadcasting his show from Hungary, which he lauded as a small country with a lot of lessons for the rest of usso many, apparently, that he returned recently for another week of Budapest-based broadcasts. Carlson was followed by former Vice President Mike Pence, who praised the Orbn governments curbs on abortion access at the Budapest Demographic Summit. This spring, the city will play host to the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC). Orbn was the first and one of the very few world leaders to endorse Trump in 2016, and Trump recently returned the favor, expressing his support for Orbn in Hungarys upcoming parliamentary elections.

New right thinkers frequently cite Orbns ban on university gender studies programs as an example of the kind of thing they would like to do in America, and while some of them expressed perfunctory disapproval of Orbns expulsion of Central European University, they barely hid their delight that the George Soros-funded campus was forced to relocate to Vienna. The biggest difference between our conservative politicians and Viktor Orbn is this: Our team talks incessantly about how horrible wokeness is, but Prime Minister Orbn actually does something about it, enthused Rod Dreher, Ahmaris colleague at the American Conservative, last fall at the National Conservatism Conference in Orlando. Another source of admiration is the law, modeled on a 2013 Russian measure, prohibiting the popularizing of homosexuality to children. (The legislation was adopted in response to a series of sex scandals involving Hungarian officials, including one member of Orbns political party who was arrested while fleeing an all-male orgy held in defiance of COVID regulations.)

Like the Western intellectuals who thrilled to communist dictatorships during the Cold War, the American new right seems enchanted more by grand and highly symbolic gestures performed by the state (children, who still have access to the internet, will no longer be taught homosexuality!) than by, for example, per capita wealth, which is now lower in Hungary than in Romania, or with cultural and intellectual achievement, which has mostly deserted Hungary in the Orbn era.

As recently as 2016, Ahmari was castigating Orbn, who, he wrote, hollowed out the countrys democratic institutions politicized the judiciary, nationalized pensions by decree, proscribed unbalanced media coverage, and removed a slew of other checks and balances on his own power. Three years later, he was conducting a softball interview with Orbns foreign minister, Pter Szijjrt, and indignantly arguing that Western elites should stop lecturing Hungary. More recently, he appeared to endorse the Hungarian governments imposition of price controls on groceries.

Ahmaris new admiration for eastern alternatives to Western decadence does not stop at the Danube. Im at peace with a Chinese-led 21st century, he announced last year in a (since deleted) tweet. Late-liberal America is too dumb and decadent to last as a superpower. Chinese civilization, especially if it recovers more of its Confucian roots, will possess a great deal of natural virtue. He has repeatedly praised Wang Huning, first secretary of the Secretariat of the Chinese Communist Party and a leading party intellectual, whose 1989 book, America Against America, assailed what one writer described as the radical, nihilistic individualism at the heart of modern American liberalism. When the Chinese government recently decided to ban depictions of sissy men in popular entertainment, Ahmari favorably contrasted the move with the United States, which got rid of its restrictions against degeneracy in a flash of postwar liberation, and it has definitely backfired. Chinas war on metrosexuals, Ahmari continued, wouldve been commonplace in, e.g., an older Hollywood that wasnt at war with nature and the family.

This perception of Western society as enervated and effete and dictatorships as vigorous and manly was shared by the political pilgrims of old. Hollander quotes the Polish American Sovietologist Adam Ulam, who observed in 1966 that an intellectual often finds a certain morbid fascination in the puritanic and repressive aspects of the Soviet regime and also in its enormous outward self-assurance, which contrasts so saliently with the apologetic, hesitant self-image of the democratic world.

Then there is Ahmaris native Iran. The lesson of the Islamic revolution is that rapid secularization of the kind that the Shah pursued was bound to create a backlash, he told me in a recent conversation. It was startling to hear, especially considering his passionate, almost vocational support of the Green Movement when I met him a dozen years ago. As recently as 2018, he described the Pahlavi dynasty as overseeing a benign autocracy, but now he castigates the shah for having owned half the casinos in Tehran and instituted a social welfare program for prostitutes. While noting that the Iranian Revolution was a tragedy for my family, Ahmari cryptically warns that it offers an interesting lesson for American liberals today and what kind of backlashes they may be fomenting.

Ahmari is at pains to distinguish the new rights approach to foreign policy from the isolationist right and the anti-imperialist left. The former, driven by nativism, fears and distrusts the world outside Americas borders, and believes that too much American engagement abroad can only corrupt it at home. The latter, driven by self-hatred, romanticizes the foreign, and believes that American racism, capitalism, and oppression of marginalized peoples corrupt the world. By way of distinguishing the new right, Ahmari pointed me to a moronic and sinister argument from the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, a Washington think tank funded by both Charles Koch and George Soros, which depicts the Chinese government as the primary victim of violent attacks on Asian Americans, and advocates for toning down criticism of the CCP:

The specific substance of Quincys strange take may be at odds with what Ahmari and the new right believe, but youd be forgiven for noticing that they advocate a lot of the same things. The isolationist right, the woke left, and the new right are all pretty repulsed by their country (albeit for different reasons), and believe its unique repulsiveness disqualifies it from having an active role in the world.

Wary of the Globalist American Empire, Ahmari now argues for understanding small, vulnerable, but independent democracies as belonging instead to the historic civilizational spheres of revanchist great powers like Russia and China. With 130,000 Russian troops massed on Ukraines borders, Ahmari has recently been frothing at Liberals and NATO jingoists. Last August, during the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, he ghoulishly exulted in the humiliating defeat dealt to a decadent West: Motherfucker, you couldnt handle Afghan goatherders, he taunted from his keyboard as U.S. Marines and Afghan civilians were being targeted by the Taliban. By contrast, that same week, he tweeted admiringly of the secretary of the Supreme National Security Council of Iran, who Isnt ashamed of his national heritage and Couldnt give a shit about your pronouns. Ahmari insists on calling the Biden administration the regime, lamenting the bizarre fact of a regime that enacts laws referring to mothers as birthing people. (His Twitter account has lately become a daily encyclical of Francoist pronunciamentos, juvenile invective, and praise for political extremists.)

Beyond the moral weirdness, Ahmaris new creed is also notable for its incoherence. At the same that that he would like the U.S. government to adopt what he believes is the Russian model of state interference in the public square, he worries that, The repressive mechanisms used in America are a lot more sophisticated than in Russia. It would seem, therefore, that the United States already uses state power to shape society along certain moral dimensionsjust not the ones Ahmari likes. So is the point to have a repressive state apparatus that privileges his side in all places at all times, regardless of elections? If so, why on earth is such a transition from democracy to autocracy incumbent upon Americans in particular? Which America is that supposed to revive or save?

When I asked Ahmari why his writing and tweeting include not just criticisms of American liberals but praise of foreign autocrats, he responded that, There are moments in which an adversary tells you a truth about yourself and its worthwhile to listen and look in the mirror and see if it matches reality.

It wasnt an answer to the question I asked, but on its own terms, I understood what he meant. Although Im much more relaxed about issues of human sexuality than Ahmari, there are aspects of the new gender ideology, particularly its harmful effects on women and children, that I too find deeply troubling. But it remains a question how Ahmari gets from A to B: from defending Trump against fanatical anti-Trump ideologues to ditching liberalism and democracy altogether; from rolling his eyes at the use of silly new gender pronouns to admiring the perceived virility of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps. When Putin delivers a speech bemoaning American cancel culture and praising Martin Luther King Jr., why do Ahmaris bullshit detectors suddenly fail and leave him as credulous as Anna Louise Strong reporting on Stalin?

Maybe, as a secular Jewish homosexual, Ill never be able to understand Ahmaris transition. And maybe Im the fool for not being sufficiently chastened by the failure of America to promote democracy abroad and crush wokeness at home. But if the rah-rah neoconservatism of our misspent youth was nave, Ahmaris new preference for playing authoritarian, ethnically homogenous, Eastern European dress-up in a diverse, continental democracy of 330 million is no less romantic, and even less practical. Ahmari still acknowledges that the United States is the only country in the world where someone like me could come from Iran and within that span become a leading intellectual on the right. But he seems to be left with nothing but contempt for the system, principles, and people that made his American dream possible.

In each of his books, Ahmari has generously acknowledged three men to whom I owe my career in journalism and whom I have resolved to thank in every book I publish till I pass from this earthly valehis former bosses Bret Stephens and John Podhoretz, and me. I used to feel a measure of slightly bemused pride at this tribute. But now the first thing that comes to mind is a question posed by a pair of my fellow degenerates: What have I done to deserve this?

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When the Pope Hits Your Eye Like a Big Pizza Pie, That's Ahmari - Tablet Magazine

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Ken Jeong and Robin Thicke Walk Off from TMS After Seeing Rudy Giuliani – TheTealMango

Posted: at 5:57 am

Ken Jeong and Robin Thicke Walked Off from TMS!

The Masked Singer Season 7 has gained some heat in the past few days. This time, for a different reason altogether.

The judges of The Masked Singer walked off from the set afterRudy Giuliani unmasked himself during the show. This was the first episode of the show and it was taped last week.

Ken and Robin, the judges of the current season were stressed seeing Rudy on the stage. Thus, to protest, the two walked off the stage. TMS Season 7 will feature The Good, The Bad,andThe Cuddly.

What exactly went wrong and who is Rudy? Lets dive deep.

Apparently, Rudy Giuliani was one of the primary Donald Trump assistants during the 2020 elections.

The shows cast this time will feature the good, the bad, and the cuddlywhich now falls in place given Rudys disclosure. Giuliani, being one of the primary aides to Trump in 2020 brought him the trouble.

In addition to being Trumps assistant, he was involved in much more. After Trumps defeat by Joe Biden, Rudy made many false accusations and claimed voter fraud while the elections were held.

Moreover, their legal team also challenged the election result and as it was meant to be, there was no success.Nada.

Deadline reported the news first and also reported that the two judges immediately left the show and walked off after spotting Rudy.

Eventually, they did come back. On the other hand, the show led by other two judges Nicole Scherzinger and Jenny McCarty decided to be onstage. They also had a little chat with Rudy.

TMS is the show which has been doing so well for the past six seasons. Its USP is the surprise that follows when the celebrity is dumped and has to remove their masks.

Since 2020, the reaction towards Rudy was the most unwelcoming;cant say he didnt deserve it.

Earlier, the show has slapped with criticism over a different controversy aboutSarah Palin, masked as the bear.

If you are thinking, you get a spoiler here, you are right. But not entirely.

Rudys costume remains questionable and we are not going to shout out loud on that one. Also, his episode is not coming out until the next month, therefore, clearly, everyone needs to wait.

Not a lot of word about what else happened. It will be interesting to find out which category out of the three i.e. the good, the bad, and the cuddly did Rudy belong to.

The situation that happened with Ken, Robin, and Rudy is understandable. However, shows like The Masked Singer needs to stay politics-free. No one wants to ruin what shows like these have been offering for the past few seasons.

Everyone loved TMS. Everyone enjoys it to the fullest. Incidents like these are rather unexpected.

Maybe, Fox takes its lesson from what happened and avoids having such political problematic individuals in their show.

One month before you actually, see this episode. Good luck, waiting.

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Ken Jeong and Robin Thicke Walk Off from TMS After Seeing Rudy Giuliani - TheTealMango

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