What A Day - Maskers, Prepare For Takeoff
Episode Date: April 19, 2022A federal judge in Tampa, Florida, voided the nationwide travel mask mandate on Monday. Last week, the CDC extended that mask mandate for commercial flights, subways, trains, and other forms of public... transportation until May 3rd.The Russia-Ukraine war has sparked concerns among U.S. officials about cyber warfare. On Sunday, CBS News reported “evolving intelligence” that suggests that Russia is planning new cyber attacks.And in headlines: Russia launched an assault on eastern Ukraine, Johnson and Johnson agreed to settle an opioid lawsuit for $99 million, and Alex Jones filed for bankruptcy.Follow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
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It's Tuesday, April 19th.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And this is What A Day, where we've decided against shifting our release schedule to a
Kendrick Lamar style of frequency.
Just not for us.
Yeah, we're not going to have five years between episodes, but we are going to wrap
all of the news.
And we'll win a Pulitzer for it.
We will.
We will win a Pulitzer.
On today's show, U.S. officials are warning about potential cyber attacks from Russia,
plus Alex Jones' Infowars files for bankruptcy.
But first, a federal judge in Tampa, Florida,
voided the nationwide travel mask mandate on Monday.
Last week, the CDC extended the mask mandate
for commercial flights, subways, trains,
pretty much every form of public transportation
from April 18th, so yesterday, until May 3rd.
But District Judge Catherine Kimball-Mizell,
who was appointed by former President Trump,
said that the mandate exceeds the CDC's legal authority,
improperly avoided notice and comment procedures, and that it was, quote, arbitrary and capricious.
I have to say, I learned about arbitrary and capricious in law school, and that's not what I learned.
Not it!
Who am I to say? Other than a judge who was voted not qualified by the ABA.
What does this mean for people traveling in the near future, Priyanka? Will they not be required to wear masks?
So after this news came out, the TSA announced that they will stop enforcing the mask mandate
on public transportation.
Several major airlines also said that they'll make masks optional.
That is United, Alaska, American, my beloved Delta, and Southwest.
Kind of seems like it's going to be the Wild West, though.
A few of these airlines have come out and said that there might be inconsistent enforcement over the next like
24 hours or so just because all of this is so completely new. But there are a bunch of
unanswered questions still. You know, will the Department of Justice try to halt the ruling and
file an appeal? How quickly will this be implemented across the country if that doesn't happen or if
it doesn't work? This is also all happening during an uptick in both COVID and in spring and summer travel.
So more people on flights.
The number of people in airports has reached pre-pandemic levels in many of these airports.
And if there's one thing that happens, you know, when things are uncertain and COVID's around,
you know, a little bit of chaos.
Yeah.
Yeah. I mean,
I personally have a flight on Thursday. I will very much be keeping my mask on.
But here is White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki addressing the issue yesterday.
This is obviously a disappointing decision. The CDC continues recommending wearing a mask in
public transit. As you know, this just came out this afternoon. So right now, the Department of
Homeland Security, who would be implementing and the CDC are reviewing the decision. And of course, the Department of Justice
would make any determinations about litigation. Oh, boy. The good thing is we know that a lot of
lessons have been learned during the COVID years. So surely everybody will behave completely
reasonably. While this mask mandate is still up in the air, another one is going back into effect.
So tell us more about what's happening in Philly right now. Yeah. So yesterday, Philly became the
first major American city to reinstate an indoor mask mandate after it was first lifted in early
March of this year. The mandate requires people to wear a mask in all indoor public places,
though businesses do have the option of requiring proof of vaccination instead. This happened in response to sharply rising COVID case numbers
with the new Omicron sub-variant BA.2 on the rise,
especially throughout the Northeast.
But the response remains mixed.
Some public officials, you know, are all for it.
There's a group of business owners and residents
who are suing to stop the mandate.
But the mandate didn't go into place arbitrarily.
Philly actually has its own COVID
guidelines that are a bit different than the CDC's. The mandate automatically kicked in because the
average number of reported new cases in the city has increased by over 50% in a period of 10 days,
which is quite significant. The CDC's guidelines, on the other hand, rely more on hospital figures,
which tend to lag behind trends in new case counts. That is the update on
mask mandates in the country. We will continue to follow this and bring you updates as we learn more.
All right. Thanks, Priyanka. Now some news from Russia. The Russia-Ukraine war has sparked
new concerns among U.S. officials about cyber warfare. On Sunday, CBS News reported, quote,
evolving intelligence that suggests that Russia is planning new cyber attacks. Here Sunday, CBS News reported, quote, evolving intelligence that suggests that
Russia is planning new cyber attacks. Here's Jen Easterly, director of the Cybersecurity and
Infrastructure Security Agency, talking to 60 Minutes. There's going to be a breach. There's
going to be an incident. There's going to be an attack. Okay, yeah, that was not like,
there might be. That was very definitive and a little bit terrifying. So given that the war in Ukraine has been going on for a few months now,
what exactly has sparked these concerns for right now?
It's a good question.
And according to Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco,
the federal government has recently seen increasing activity from, quote,
Russian state actors scanning, probing, looking for opportunities, looking for weaknesses.
Okay. Also does not sound great.
Yeah.
So when we talk about a cyber attack, what exactly does that mean for everyone listening
who might not know and also me?
Yeah, totally. So she's not talking about like Russia hacking Biden's DMs or anybody's DMs or
something, right? The fear here is much bigger. It's about Russia managing to attack our
infrastructure and in particular, the energy and fear here is much bigger. It's about Russia managing to attack our infrastructure
and in particular, the energy and finance sectors of our infrastructure. And really,
it's seen as like retaliation for the sanctions that the US has imposed upon Russia in light of
their invasion of Ukraine. I mean, this has long been a concern even before the war started. So we
remember like Russian impact on the 2016 election.
Like it's like long been a narrative that Russia wants to and could cause chaos in our systems, in our democracy.
There's a contentious history between us and Russia.
And they're thought to have a really extensive network of some of the most sophisticated hackers in the world at their disposal.
They're really the only country that's managed to take down like an electrical grid as they did previously in Ukraine.
And what's scary about what happened in Ukraine with that hack is that Russia actually hacked
those systems for months and months before launching their cyber attack. This is months
ago. This is pre-war. So in other words, they were like able to kind of watch the Ukrainian
power grid and operate undetected for months before
they actually attacked. Okay, so that is especially terrifying, because not that we know anything,
but that could be happening if they are going undetected and just kind of like biding their time.
Completely. That's pretty terrifying. Yeah, I mean, I think the implication here is that they
could already be deeply embedded in some of the U.S. infrastructure, right? Right. And it seems U.S. officials are concerned and frankly, I think, unnerved by the lack
of attacks so far.
Yeah, this seems like the eerie quiet before something really bad happens.
And I don't like the feeling.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like this real sensation that Russia is planning something big.
And I think there's a feeling of, well, Russia decided to attack Ukraine knowing full well what it would engender
in international politics. And would they have done that if they didn't have like a backup plan?
Right.
Of how to like, hurt us?
Yeah, that's a good point.
And so if Russia pulled this off, it would be a really, really big deal. So here's Easterly again
on CBS.
Everything that you do hour by hour is largely dependent in some way on the critical infrastructure.
How you get gas at the local pump, how you get food at the grocery store, how you get
money from your ATM, how you get your power, how you get your water, how you communicate.
All of that is our critical infrastructure.
And that's what we're saying is a potential risk to a Russian malicious cyber attack.
To be clear, that's everything.
And suffice it to say that if Russia were able to impact any of this, we'd be in massive,
massive trouble.
Yeah, I understand why they had her do that, because I was so calmed by the sound of her
voice.
Like the contents of what she was saying, quite alarming.
But I was like lulled into this like,
oh yeah, okay.
You're like my food, my money, my water.
Right, right.
Just everything.
But you know, I could listen to her say that
for hours and hours
and probably feel pretty calm,
which is a little concerning.
Right, exactly.
So we'll keep you updated on cyber attacks from Russia,
but that's the latest for now.
We'll be back after some ads. So we'll keep you updated on cyber attacks from Russia. But that's the latest for now.
We'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Some updates on the war in Ukraine.
Russia has reportedly launched its long-expected assault on the eastern region of the country. The Secretary of Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council said that Russian forces had breached the perimeter of two small cities in the Donbass and Kharkiv regions on Monday, but added that Ukrainian troops were holding their ground.
The Kremlin has hinted at this new objective over the past few weeks after Russian forces failed to conquer Kyiv, the country's capital. Moscow also
launched a missile attack on the western Ukrainian city of Lviv yesterday that killed at least seven
people. Those were the first deaths the city has seen since the start of the war. Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelensky said of yesterday's attacks, quote, no matter how many
Russian soldiers are driven there, we will fight. We will not give up anything Ukrainian. White House
Press Secretary Jen Psaki also said on Monday that the U.S. will impose more sanctions on Russia as
punishment for these advances and the country's continued assault on Ukraine. But she did not
specify what these new restrictions would entail. Just awful that this has gone on for so long and
continues instead of stops. Yeah, pretty terrible. The effort to hold pharmaceutical companies
accountable for the country's opioid epidemic continues. Yesterday, Johnson & Johnson agreed
to settle a West Virginia lawsuit to the tune of $99 million. West Virginia Attorney General
Patrick Morrissey filed the suit in 2019 against a number of pharmaceutical companies, claiming that they promoted opioids by overstating their benefits
and failing to disclose the risk of addiction. In a statement released on Monday, J&J maintained
that the settlement isn't an admission of any wrongdoing on their part, but the eight-figure
price tag seems to suggest otherwise. The West Virginia trial will still continue against the
remaining defendants
who have not settled their way out.
Those are Teva Pharmaceuticals USA,
along with AbbVie's, Allergan, and its affiliates.
Morrissey said on Monday that his office
will continue to fight companies like these
and that the J&J settlement will, quote,
provide significant help to those affected the most
by the opioid crisis in West Virginia.
The conspiracy theory that actions have consequences
has been proven by Alex Jones. Three companies associated with the far right and mostly
deplatformed broadcaster filed for bankruptcy over the weekend, including Infowars, amid defamation
lawsuits against him in multiple states. The lawsuit stemmed from claims Jones made following
the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, which framed the tragic event as a, quote, false flag operation fabricated in part by gun control advocates.
Parents of children who were killed at Sandy Hook say these claims led to harassment, compelling one family to move 10 times and remain in hiding in the time since the shooting.
That's just unbelievable.
Yeah, absolutely horrible. Jones has already been found liable in two cases,
one in Texas and one in Connecticut, but damages have not been decided. Filing for Chapter 11
bankruptcy lets companies put civil litigation on hold while they restructure their finances.
So either Jones is doing anything he can to avoid paying victims, or the deep state is doing
something so high level in advance that we can't even understand it. It's possible. It is. It's
deep. Never one to
sleep on a grift, Jones has already started
trying to make money off of the bankruptcy
filing. On his show yesterday, he pushed fans
to support him amid legal judgments
by buying shirts and, wait for it,
supplements. Yeah, just
what everyone needs. Yeah.
I would hope that this is the kind of bankruptcy that
then you never hear from the kind of person
ever again, but I don't know if that's what we're in for, sadly.
I don't see it going that way.
He likes to talk.
Loves to, unfortunately, for all of us.
Tragically.
It wasn't long ago when the worst thing you could find in a General Mills cereal was a shrimp tail covered in cinnamon sugar.
I am still horrified by that story to this day.
But an even more pernicious element might be lurking among the little rainbows and shooting stars of Lucky Charms cereal, according to people who have
recently complained that the latter cereal gave them gastrointestinal symptoms. The reports were
collected on the website www.iwaspoisoned.com, another online resource that few of us knew we
had. They number over 3,000 and an investigation has also been
launched by the Food and Drug Administration, which said it had also received over 100 similar
reports directly. Cool, cool, cool. As to what it feels like to have the Lucky Charms virus,
also known as pot of gold syndrome, reported symptoms include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea,
and stomach pain. The symptoms are consistent across reports and even within the individual reports,
like the one which reads, quote,
experienced stomach pain and diarrhea
after one bowl of Lucky Charms.
Tried it two more times
to see if it was actually the cereal
and had the same symptoms.
Cool, cool, cool.
The sacrifice this person is making for science.
You know, not recommended,
but a hero in our eyes.
For its part, General Mills says it hasn't found a link
between consumer illness and Lucky Charms consumption.
They better hope that a link doesn't materialize
or else they will lose a substantial portion of their leprechaun gold.
Honestly, it's simply luck that this hasn't happened to me
because while I have not had Lucky Charms in the past couple weeks.
I have had many other sugary cereals that are mostly for like 11-year-olds.
It could have been in the rotation.
It easily could have been in the rotation.
I'm not above it.
But would you have known to go to www.iwaspoisoned.com or would you just be like, I'm sorry, I really just don't feel good and not know how to move forward?
I probably would have guessed it was like a toddler bug rather than the Lucky Charms,
but I'm glad to now know that I should just stick to my Captain Crunch.
Yeah, that we have the people, you know, really diving deep on this and
doing controlled experiments.
I appreciate it.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just authentic reports on IWasPoisoned.com like me,
what a day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at Crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And share your pot of gold, General Mills.
You know, I'm sure that they will have to at some point soon. Yeah.
Now that we've made this story, we broke this
open. We broke this open. The world
knows.
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