What A Day - Return Of The Mask
Episode Date: July 19, 2021Los Angeles County reimposed mask mandates this weekend for everyone indoors in a public space because the Delta variant is causing cases and hospitalization rates to climb. Last week, the seven-day a...verage of cases in the U.S. went up by almost 70 percent in a single week.The Biden administration kicked off a public war against social media companies last week regarding their inaction on the spread of COVID misinformation, and Facebook responded with a blog post that accused the White House of "finger pointing."And in headlines: extreme floods in Germany have left at least 189 people dead, a federal judge in Texas ruled against DACA, and a new report on the reach of Pegasus spyware.Show Notes:NYT: “The Pandemic Has a New Epicenter: Indonesia” – https://nyti.ms/3ex2yCUThe Guardian: “Majority of Covid misinformation came from 12 people, report finds” – https://bit.ly/3ksXl2MFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Monday, July 19th. I'm Akilah Hughes.
And I'm Gideon Resnick, and this is What A Day,
where we are begging someone to take their crying baby on Jeff Bezos' flight to space.
Yeah, and don't apologize either, alright?
Just let that baby shriek and say nothing at all.
Yeah, make them the first baby to get glared at in zero gravity.
Yeah, don't change their diaper beforehand either.
Let it stink and let it be loud. On today's show, search and rescue efforts continue after
devastating floods in Germany. Plus, the Tokyo Olympics unveils cardboard beds that appear to
be anti-romance. But first, the latest on the Delta variant's impact on the world.
I would say that it's not punishment, it's prevention.
We still have 4 million people out of 10 million that haven't been vaccinated
and many of them are young people
and we're seeing that this transmission is so highly contagious
that it will cost more in the long run if we have to see our hospitals being impacted,
our ICU units as well as our health care workers.
That was Hilda Solis, chair of the L.A. County Board of Supervisors on ABC's This Week.
And she's talking about the county's recent decision to reimpose a mask mandate for
everyone indoors in a public space. That's for the unvaccinated and the vaccinated.
Local officials made the decision because of how cases and hospitalization rates are
climbing as a result of the highly transmissible Delta variant. But this example from LA County is just one of the
many that shows what the world is facing right now. Yeah, I mean, that's exactly right. In
countries like Namibia and Tunisia, for example, recorded deaths have skyrocketed by something like
40% in the last week or so. And they are among many African countries who, by nature of capitalism
largely, have ended up with vaccination coverage
that is in the single digit percentages while Delta is running rampant. And then over in Southeast
Asia, the virus had been contained relatively well in the early going of the pandemic. And now
because vaccination rates have remained somewhat low, countries like Indonesia are now facing
catastrophic health conditions as a result. We're going to link to a story on Indonesia itself as well in the show notes so you can learn more. Yeah, it's a real
shame. And meanwhile, in the UK, a country with high vaccination rates, today is being referred
to as Freedom Day, where basically all restrictions are set to be lifted. So what's that situation
like? Well, while there is not a big uptick in deaths there, there is a big uptick in cases
driven by Delta.
That's been the case for quite some time.
That's actually what led to them delaying this opening
from its original June 21st date.
Nearly 55,000 cases were reported on Saturday alone.
That is part of the reason why this reopening
has been viewed by some as controversial.
At this current moment,
nightclub owners seem to be thrilled about it.
Some scientists do not.
You can pick your poison as to who you want to listen to there. And to add to this mix as well,
just this past weekend, Britain's new health secretary, who was fully vaccinated,
said that he had tested positive for the virus and experienced what he described as, quote,
very mild symptoms. And that was after having a face-to-face meeting with Prime Minister Boris
Johnson and others. Johnson then had to go into this 10-day self-isolation after coming into contact with him.
Yeah, I would like for Boris Johnson to go into a longer isolation, but, you know,
neither here nor there. But it definitely feels like we are seeing more high-profile people test
positive as of late. Three Texas Democrats who went to D.C. announced over the weekend that they
tested positive. And then, of course, there's the Olympics.
Yeah, there is the Olympics.
So just in the past few days, Bradley Beal had to be replaced on the U.S. Olympic basketball team after reportedly testing positive.
Coco Gauff, the American tennis player, announced on Sunday that she would also have to miss due to a positive test.
Then three members of the South African soccer delegation, including two players, apparently tested positive inside the Olympic Village.
That, of course, is just ahead of the start of the games on Friday.
And those are only some of the instances that have been identified so far.
And the IOC has said that above 80 percent of athletes have been vaccinated.
And so at this point, we don't really know if some of these might be breakthroughs or false positives or what the details are.
Yeah, I mean, it seems like in any case, they should probably just not have the Olympics at this point. But let's bring it back
home now. So we know LA County is telling residents to stay masked when indoors in public.
But what does the rest of the country look like? It looks less good than it did a few weeks ago,
for sure. So last Friday, the CDC said that the seven-day average of cases had gone up by almost 70% in a single week, hovering around 26,000 a day.
And then if you look more recently, newer daily cases are even higher than that.
And hospitalizations have also gone up, too.
And the biggest jumps that are being seen so far are concentrated in states like Arkansas, Florida, Missouri, and Louisiana, with comparatively lower vaccination rates than the rest of the country.
But many places are seeing numbers go up compared to earlier lows this year overall.
So that's still a really big concern, particularly for the significant portion of people who remain
unvaccinated in the U.S. and who are very susceptible at this moment. Here's Dr. Scott
Gottlieb, the former head of the FDA, yesterday on CBS. So many people are susceptible to the
virus, but if 25% of the
population remains susceptible to the virus in absolute terms, that's still a lot of people.
And this virus is so contagious, this variant is so contagious that it's going to infect
the majority of them. Most people will either get vaccinated or have been previously infected,
or they will get this Delta variant. And for most people who get this Delta variant,
it's going to be the most serious virus that they get in their lifetime.
So that's the latest on where the COVID numbers stand around the world.
But Akilah, turning now to the social media side of all of this, the Biden administration has recently started pointing fingers at Facebook for how the country's vaccination campaign in the U.S. has stalled out.
So what is the word there?
OK, so last week began the public war between the Biden administration and social media companies regarding their inaction on the spread of misinformation about COVID, vaccines,
and pretty much everything. The Surgeon General, Vivek H. Murthy, issued a warning to them saying
that they need to do more to stop the spread. Here he is last Thursday.
We expect more from our technology companies. We're asking them to operate with greater
transparency and accountability. We're asking them to monitor misinformation more closely. We're asking them to consistently take action against misinformation
super spreaders on their platforms. Then on Friday, President Biden also said this while
about to board a plane. They're killing people. The only pandemic we have is among the unvaccinated
and they're killing people. So just to reiterate what you just heard,
the president is saying social media companies
are killing people.
Yeah, and so clearly, I mean, it sounds like
this is not something the administration
is going to be backing down from anytime soon.
No, it doesn't.
Has there actually been a response here?
Yeah, so Facebook released a blog post on Saturday
saying that the Biden administration
was participating in, quote, finger pointing,
and described the ways it's tried,, let's really face it, failed,
to clamp down on lies about vaccines by banning some 18 million sources of misinformation.
But they didn't answer for the 12 bad actors that produce 65% of misinformation out there on social media regarding COVID.
Yes, it's literally just a dozen people.
And that's according to a report from the Center for Countering Digital Hate that White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki cited on Friday.
We're going to link to that in our show notes.
Yeah. So who should users actually believe in all of this?
Okay, it's complicated. I mean, there's plenty of blame to share. As much as Facebook,
YouTube, and Twitter are responsible for what happens on their private platforms
and have consistently tried to pass the buck or hide behind free speech laws,
it's not as if the U.S. government has done a great job of rolling out COVID guidance or vaccine information. And when you have a former president who says the virus is fine or that
drinking bleach might kill it, it's hard to pin the blame squarely on the shoulders of social
media companies. But it does seem to be a new era, with masking guidance ebbing and flowing as
vaccine rates have stagnated. So again, the onus is on both parties to try to do right by the people on this planet
and stamp out misinformation where they can.
Facebook should care about losing millions of users who believe the misinformation,
especially if, and I think this seems likely, their only concern is their bottom line.
We'll keep following this misinformation blame game, but that's the latest for now. It's Monday WOD Squad, and for today's
temp check, we're talking about the latest advances in prude furniture.
So we mentioned COVID at the Olympics earlier, but we didn't talk about one interior design choice that could help limit its spread.
Athletes in the Olympic Village will be sleeping on cardboard bed frames in what some believe is an attempt by Tokyo officials to discourage sex between competitors.
The cardboard twin bed frames look cool and are 100% recyclable, but it seems unlikely they could support the weight of two normal people, let alone two members of the extremely muscled and powerful class of superhumans called Olympic athletes.
The truth is there's pretty good evidence that no sex beds debuting in a global pandemic is just a coincidence.
Officials were touting the beds as an environmentally friendly option as early as January of last year.
So Gideon, what's your take on these beds?
I mean, this is like the least bad thing that we've heard about the Olympics thus far,
in my personal opinion.
I would not opt to have these, but like, again,
all of the other things that we've heard about how this particular Olympics is going to be different from the fact that there will not be medals that are put around people. They'll be apparently passed to them on some sort of plate to all of
the, you know, other challenges for both the city and the country as it relates to COVID. This is
like the least of the concerns seemingly, you know, but, you know, it does not seem comfortable.
But same question for you. Oh, man. I mean, I just feel like some of these youngsters,
this is the first bed frame they've ever had.
So good for them.
But I really don't think that, yeah,
I think that if you're going to disqualify Sha'Carri for weed,
then, like, why are you also making it harder for athletes to compete
because they're sleeping on literal pieces of cardboard?
Like, do you just want this to be the worst Olympics?
It feels like it was going to be anyway. Like, you didn't have to give them those beds on top of it. But
you know what? Godspeed. I hope everyone is fine. I hope no more people get COVID there.
I hope by some miracle those cardboard beds work out. I don't know. It's just,
it's not appealing to me in the least. No. Easier to assemble than Ikea,
I suppose, is the one upside here, maybe. That's right. Well, just like that, we've checked our temps.
Stay safe, and we'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Extreme floods in Germany and other parts of Western Europe
left at least 189 people dead and hundreds more still missing.
Over the weekend, Western Germany and towns in Belgium and the Netherlands
saw an unprecedented level of rainfall,
which caused rivers to spike to levels that haven't been seen in centuries.
I'm telling you, unfortunate record after record. Some places were hit with around a month's worth of
rain in one day, and the extent of the damage could be seen yesterday once the water subsided,
revealing houses, roads, and train lines that were drastically swept away. Tens of thousands
of people were also forced to evacuate. Chancellor Angela Merkel visited flooded
sites yesterday and promised to deliver swift financial aid and focus on policies to curb climate change. A federal judge in Texas ruled
against the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, on Friday. The Obama-era program
was made to prevent young immigrants from deportation. Friday's ruling bars the government
from approving any new applications for the program, but does not change the status of
current DACA recipients.
At the end of June,
around 81,000 first-time DACA applications were pending,
and now they're expected to stay in limbo
following the decision.
President Biden says the ruling was deeply disappointing
and that the DOJ plans to appeal.
DACA supporters continue to argue
for congressional legislation
to provide permanent relief for young immigrants.
Here's another reason to replace your phone with a horn on a tube that only lets you talk to other
children at the playground. A new investigation has revealed that an Israeli spyware firm's
software was used to hack or attempt to hack into the phones of 37 government officials,
journalists, business people, and human rights activists. The software is called Pegasus,
and its stated use is to help governments track potential terrorists and criminals. But the new investigation revealed some more troubling
applications, including runs on the phones of two women close to journalist Jamal Khashoggi,
both before and after his murder at the direction of Saudi Arabia's crown prince.
Pegasus can access almost anything on an infected device and secretly make audio and video recordings.
If you suspect you've been targeted, you can take action by having lots of conversations
around your phone about how much you love the government.
Oh man, I don't want to do that.
All right, well, Florida governor and close relative of the rubber punching bag shaped
like a buff man's torso, Ron DeSantis, took an L over the weekend.
His dream of a tropical cruise with all-inclusive coronavirus was shattered when a federal appeals
court ruled that the CDC could enforce COVID restrictions on the cruise ship industry.
Florida had been fighting in court to lift those restrictions, which include testing crew members,
testing requirements for passengers, shorter trips, and more. On June 18th, a Trump-appointed
judge ruled in favor of the state, saying that the CDC was overstepping its authority and the
rules could only exist as, quote, recommendations. But this weekend's proceedings put a stay on that order. The
matter isn't quite settled yet, and Florida could challenge the CDC yet again in its quest to make
a five-day stomach flu the second worst sickness you can catch on a boat with a buffet. Yeah, I
mean, I was not inclined to go from Florida or any other state, and now I'm good. I'm really,
truly good. Yeah, cruises feel like a thing we can leave behind,
but those are the headlines.
That is all for today.
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I'm Akilah Hughes.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
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What A Day is a production of Crooked Media.
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Sonia Tun and Jazzy Marine are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein, and our executive producers are Leo Duran, Akilah Hughes, and me.
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