What A Day - Florida's Right To Post Shall Not Be Infringed
Episode Date: May 26, 2021Moderna said that its vaccine trial for 12-17 year olds resulted in zero cases of symptomatic COVID. Also, we discuss so-called breakthrough cases, which happen when fully vaccinated people get corona...virus: Don't worry, they're wildly rare and a sign of the effectiveness of vaccines.Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed a law that would prohibit social media platforms from kicking off political candidates. If you're thinking "How do you enforce that?" or "Is this all to suck up to Trump?" the answers are “yes” and “obviously.”And in headlines: a Russian company tried to pay science influencers to sow vaccine misinformation, Marjorie Taylor Greene's holocaust analogies, and Simone Biles lands a double pike on vault.Show Notes:NYT: "C.D.C. Will Not Investigate Mild Infections in Vaccinated Americans" – https://nyti.ms/2RKG7SxWSJ: "Intelligence on Sick Staff at Wuhan Lab Fuels Debate on Covid-19 Origin" – https://on.wsj.com/3yOKFbkFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
it's wednesday may 26th i'm akilah hughes and i'm getting a second this is what a day where
we put the super and the blood into super flower blood moon this moon needs to figure itself out
man i mean it's honestly doing too much like why don't we just go back to moon and try again?
On today's show, Florida says it will punish social media companies that suspend the accounts of political candidates. Plus, we'll have headlines.
But first, the latest.
Today, the U.S. will hit 50% of adult Americans that are fully vaccinated.
This is a major milestone in our country's vaccination efforts.
Yay, yay. All right. So that was Andy Slavitt, a White House senior advisor on the COVID-19 response with the big number of the day.
Giddy, what else did we hear about the federal response to the pandemic yesterday?
A lot of good numbers.
The latest briefing went over some individual successes, including that nine states have
hit at least 70% of their adult population with at least one dose.
That is great.
Reminder, that's the magic number the White House is looking for nationwide by July 4th.
And almost 5 million adolescents have gotten at least one dose as well, per the CDC data.
And that is sure to go up with some other news that we got yesterday as well. Moderna said that its vaccine trial for 12 to
17 year olds resulted in zero, zero cases of symptomatic COVID. And they're planning to apply
for authorization from the FDA for that age group in June. If they are successful, that would
accompany Pfizer, which has already been cleared for use in 12 to 15 year olds throughout the
country. And then zooming out, we are now among the most vaccinated countries in the entire world,
which is great, but of course means that major inequities remain. Even still, at the same
briefing that we're talking about, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky warned of risks for the
unvaccinated Americans among us over the Memorial Day holiday saying, quote,
we are not quite out of the woods yet. We certainly aren't. All right. I want everybody to turn up and have a good time. But I also don't want anybody to get COVID. So, you know,
just be smart. Get vaccinated. And something else the CDC has done recently that's gotten a bit less
attention, changing the way they are tracking so-called breakthrough cases. So can you talk
about what's going on there? Most definitely. So as a quick refresher for the listeners,
a breakthrough case is defined here as a COVID infection that happens in a fully vaccinated person. They are wildly rare. They
are unbelievably rare. The CDC puts the number at about 10,262 known cases out of 101 million
Americans that have been fully vaccinated by the end of April, a tiny, tiny, tiny percent of a
percent, although the CDC thinks that number is a little bit of an
undercount. But one thing to also take from all of this is that it's just more confirmation that
the vaccines available are incredibly, incredibly effective. For example, about a quarter of these
very, very rare cases reportedly involved no symptoms at all. Yeah, so that's what we know
about the breakthroughs. But what has changed in how the CDC is monitoring this info? And what does it mean? Well, at the start of this month, the CDC decided that they
were only going to focus on investigating the cases that involved severe outcomes. So one
example, it would mean the CDC would look at a rare case like the death of a vaccinated resident
of a Kentucky nursing home, but perhaps not a recent outbreak among the New York Yankees,
which was mostly asymptomatic. We can link to the New York Times article on all of this, but one of the main pushbacks on this
change from the scientific community is that less data overall could mean less knowledge of,
for instance, how long immunity from vaccines could last, how variants could play a role, and more.
Yeah, and last thing from the White House on COVID for today, there's been a lot more of a
push to investigate the origins of the disease in light of some new information.
So what's that update?
Oh, this is wild.
So this is largely a result of a recent story in the Wall Street Journal.
That story claimed that a U.S. intelligence report said three researchers at the Wuhan
Institute of Virology went to the hospital for treatment in November of 2019.
So that's shortly before the outbreak was confirmed.
A Chinese official denied the report's accuracy.
And I want to emphasize, there is a lot we don't know about this, including whether these
individuals even had COVID.
But two things are sort of overhanging this and why there are all the political implications
wrapped up in it.
One, a study about the origin of COVID conducted by the WHO with the Chinese
government that was published earlier this year was not completely bulletproof. Then two, there
were these indications that the Chinese government was trying to hide some things early on here.
And this all may seem sort of hard to believe, but we bring it up because yesterday White House
officials said that we need to get to the bottom of this. And this idea of a potential lab leak
has gotten a little bit more traction recently. Senior Advisor Andy Slavitt, for instance, said a more thorough investigation
needs to happen and for China to be more transparent with international investigators.
And HHS Secretary Javier Becerra made a similar case yesterday directly to the WHO.
Phase two of the COVID origin study must be launched with terms of reference that are transparent,
science-based, and give international experts the independence to fully assess the source of the
virus and the early days of the outbreak. Yes. I'm sure the reactions from everybody
are going to be completely measured and normal no matter what we find out.
That's what we're known for. That's what we do. We will let you know,
of course, what happens here. Now, Akilah, let's talk about another interesting story
out of our beloved state of Florida. Man, Florida really can't help but step in lately. So
in the state, in what community would call the darkest timeline, we have a new law, SB 7072,
and it would prohibit social media platforms from kicking off political candidates
and allow those who are kicked off to sue for monetary damages. The law also includes provisions
for randos who get kicked off the apps if they feel their terms of service are being unfairly
enforced. Governor Ron DeSantis signed the law on Monday as the founder of Project Veritas,
who got kicked off Twitter into suing for defamation, by the way, stood nearby.
So if you're thinking that's stupid or how do you even enforce that?
And is this some shit to suck up to Trump?
Yes, yes, and obviously.
Excellent.
Thank you for answering my lightning round of questions.
I am curious, though, about a lot of things.
But what specifics are actually in this law?
All right.
So it goes into effect on July 1st.
And the state's Department of Legal Affairs would investigate cases of these politicians
being thrown off the sites for violating the terms of service, and then potentially restrict
a platform from contracting with state agencies. How this would hurt a place like Twitter or
YouTube or Facebook is incredibly unclear. And by the way, I thought this was interesting,
the House of Mouse is exempt because they are based in Florida. So if you get kicked off Disney
Plus for, I don't know, campaigning too hard, yeah, they're not going to get fined.
The state can then fine companies $250,000 per day for deplatforming a candidate or $25K a day for a candidate of a non-statewide race.
So hypothetically, if a mayoral candidate in St. Mark's, a town with less than 300 residents, harasses someone or threatens violence on their platforms, that platform could be fined for getting rid of them.
That makes total sense to me. This is great policy. Let's sign it.
It's just clearly so unhinged to pass a law like this that would give political candidates different privileges than their constituents on private businesses apps.
But what's even more incomprehensible is how it could be enforced. Like how?
For starters, federal laws already protect
social media companies in the event that they remove posts. A legal expert told the Washington
Post that the bill seems, quote, purely performative, which is in line with the GOP
clown car's truly bizarre culture wars on Dr. Seuss's estate, Mr. Potato Head, Legos, and
children's sports. In a statement, DeSantis compared social networks banning accounts to,
quote, tyrannical behavior he claims that many in Florida experienced in Cuba and Venezuela.
So, yeah, getting banned from Twitter for threatening to kill someone similar to anything that has happened in either of those places.
But his point seems to be that conservatives are victims of big tech rather than the quantifiable argument that they are the biggest beneficiaries.
I mean, the top 10 news stories of the week on Facebook routinely come from Ben Shapiro, Dan Bongino, and Fox News.
Two of those are individuals that people only know because they've been amplified so much on social media.
Not to mention the spread of conspiracy theories and cults like QAnon and others flourishing online.
I personally have this conspiracy theory that the governments of most southern states are punishing their citizens
for that time that their states lost a war against the U.S. by spending tax dollars
pumping out this nonsense on a constant loop instead of, say, making sure that the air is
clean or the roads are nice or that everyone has enough to eat. Yeah, those are fundamentally
silly goals, I have to say. This is the more important stuff. Very serious stuff here.
Very, very serious. So as with anything anything the Republican Party is up to these days,
several more states are trying to get on board.
Texas, North Carolina, and Louisiana are all considering similar bills.
Yeah, which just to reiterate is a big waste of time.
Look, social networks can institute whatever policies they deem
in the best interest of their users.
And considering the right's insistence on running alleged child rapists,
and I'm looking at Anthony Bouchard, the U.S. House candidate for Wyoming running against Liz Cheney and child
rapist apologists and birdbrain conspiracy theorists. They're likely going to have to
get used to getting the boot from the digital discourse. We'll keep you posted as this develops,
but that's the WOD Squad.
And for today's Tim Check, we're talking about the most valuable bleach tips in television.
Guy Fieri signed a new contract with the Food Network yesterday,
which puts his new salary at roughly $26.6 million annually.
Before this, he was making a pitiful $10 million a year.
This truly mind-blowing number makes the diners, drive-ins, and dives host the highest-paid chef on cable TV.
And to understand why Food Network is willing to throw down like this, here's a quote from their president.
Quote, I just can't imagine Food Network without Guy. I can't even bring myself to imagine it. Giddy, do you consider
this a fair rate for the mayor of Flavortown? I think it's only fair, you know, for the amount of
time that reruns of Triple D have been on in my household and in other households and like in the
background of basically any time I've watched Food Network, I feel like it's been triple D.
Uh,
it makes sense.
It makes sense financially.
Um,
I hope that he finds a way to,
you know,
give some,
if not a majority of this back to a lot of the restaurants and places that
he has like helped promote and been,
uh,
sort of great about over the course of the pandemic,
uh,
that,
that would be nice.
And I think,
um, an official move from, uh, a mayor that would be nice. And I think, um,
an official move from a mayor of a town known as flavor.
Yeah. Yeah. Wow. I think that that's really sweet.
And I do hope that he can use his flavor town winnings to, uh,
to fund other flavors in different towns.
Yes. Yes. That would be the goal. But what about you, Akilah? Do you,
do you like this rate for him?
I mean, I think it's outrageous. Like that's what half a million dollars a week, a little bit more than?
That is wild.
I don't know that, you know, to me, I don't know how you could even do more episodes of
Driners, Drive-Ins, and Drives.
I don't even know what it's called, but I think that there's enough episodes.
Like you said, they're already in syndication.
They are rerunning this.
It's sort of like Ridiculousnesstv like mtv doesn't even exist anymore it is just
ridiculousness reruns back to back uh i don't know who's watching them i imagine the ratings
that they are getting in are from people who have died in the chair or their tv is broken and stuck
on the channel but it's just such an exorbitant amount of money. I'm like, man, he better put 500K into Dogecoin every week.
He's always tweeting about it.
You know, build it back up.
Be the hero we all need, guy.
But that's kind of where I'm at.
It seems like a lot of money for visiting places that are making the food.
I completely, yeah.
I mean, you're completely right.
I do hope that he does impact both Dogecoin and some of those restaurants that he's gone to.
I think that would benefit basically all parties that are involved in this situation.
There you go.
So, Guy, don't let us down.
We believe in you.
And just like that, we checked our temps.
Stay safe.
Maybe visit Flavortown when it's safe.
We don't know.
Tell us what it tastes like.
And we'll be back with some headlines.
Headlines. to take steps towards cleaner energy. The company is set to meet with shareholders today to vote on who will sit on their board.
A group of investors is contesting
a third of the company's nominees to the board,
arguing that Exxon should elect people
who can lead the company
towards more sustainable sources of energy,
which Exxon competitors are putting
more resources into pursuing.
The group leading this charge is known as Engine No. 1,
and it's an activist hedge fund
where they focus on environmental issues.
They want to see their more eco-friendly nominees on the board,
and they have the support of several of the country's largest public pension funds
that also have a stake in Exxon.
This effort to green Exxon signals a shifting tide
in what oil investors want from energy companies.
Well, fun fact, five to seven elderly white men is called a group of investors.
Just so you know.
Well,
in a dark moment for SpahnCon, French security officials are investigating an attempt by a PR
company with ties to Russia to pay science influencers to discredit the Pfizer BioNTech
COVID vaccine. The company allegedly offered to pay French YouTubers and bloggers to say that
people who got the Pfizer vaccine had three times the chance of dying as people who got the
AstraZeneca vaccine.
That is definitely not true.
As real influencers know, it's not even the type of untrue thing that would get a lot of likes, i.e. my cereal had shrimp in it.
Shrimp and mint toast crunch.
Shots fired.
You know, we're shooting shrimp.
The PR company asked content creators to avoid using words like advertising or sponsored in their posts and to act like they were passionate about the topic. French security officials trace the offers back to a marketing
company based in Moscow and are looking into any connections to the Russian government.
The line about Pfizer being more deadly than AstraZeneca mirrors a claim made on the official
Twitter account of Russia's Sputnik V vaccine. And this is a good time to remind everyone that
there's actually no trophy for winning the pandemic.
When you become a politician, one of the first things you learn is not to compare minor inconveniences to the Holocaust.
That lesson apparently didn't stick for Republican representative and walking band post herself, Marjorie Taylor Greene,
who has spent the last few days making repeated comparisons of mask mandates and vaccine passports to the gold stars worn by Jews in Nazi Germany.
Not sure if those Jews had to show their stars to, like, enter an indoor concert.
I actually think they were used for something else.
Yesterday, Green's comments became too insane to ignore,
drawing rebukes from Mitch McConnell and Kevin McCarthy.
No punitive actions, though, to be clear, indicating that House Republicans have about a 100-strike policy for these comparisons.
Green's previous comments on Judaism include her pet theory that a wealthy Jewish family
started wildfires with a space laser.
So she's a little inconsistent, but it seems like her main take on Jewish people
is that she just doesn't want them to vote for her.
Yeah, well, I don't think she's going to worry about that.
Arguably the greatest gymnast of all time and person who gravity forgot to affect,
Simone Biles landed the Yurchenko double pike at the U.S. Classic last weekend,
a move that involves launching off a vaulting table from a back handspring
and then flipping over twice in a pike position.
It's so difficult that it's never even been attempted by another woman as far as we know.
What's also surprising is the difficulty score it was given, 6.6, which
is lower than most gymnastics fans expected. Biles says that the low score assigned to the double
pike seems like a way of leveling the playing field so she isn't miles ahead of her competitors,
which checks out given thousands of years of everyone trying to curb black excellence.
Also, this isn't even the first time a move pioneered by Biles has been criticized as
undervalued. Asked by the New York Times if she would still do the move, Biles said, yes, quote, because I can.
I apply the same attitude to having more tabs open on my computer than any engineer thought was possible.
Yeah, when my computer wheezes, I thank Simone for the inspiration every day.
Yeah, you know, we're all heroes, I guess.
Those are the headlines.
That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe,
leave a review, avoid us with your space laser,
and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just Russian vaccine tweets like me, What A Day is
also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe
at crooked.com slash subscribe. I'm Akilah Hughes. I'm Gideon Resnick. And congrats,
Mayor Fieri. You deserve it. You know, you got the whitest hair anyone's ever seen.
Yeah. Not the first mayor to get a financial kickback either. Just saying.
Yep. What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Charlotte Landis.
Sonia Tun and Jazzy Marine are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein,
and our executive producers are Leo Duran,
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