What A Day - The Legend Of Delta Variant
Episode Date: June 9, 2021A more infectious coronavirus variant called the Delta variant is becoming the dominant strain in the UK, accounting for more than 60 percent of new infections there. We discuss what we know and don't... know about the variant, which has yet to take hold in a major way in the U.S.International law enforcement agencies arrested more than 800 people in a sting operation that had criminals sending messages through an app they believed was secure...but was actually created and overseen by the FBI.And in headlines: activists protest a pipeline's construction in Minnesota, U.S. billionaires pay little in federal taxes, and Sir Richard Branson could try to race Jeff Bezos to space.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday.
Transcript
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It's Wednesday, June 9th. I'm Akilah Hughes.
And I'm Gideon Resnick. And this is What A Day, the podcast where we devote 90% of our day to fighting off ransomware attacks.
Yeah, our priorities are basically cybersecurity first, news second, and honestly, it's worked so far.
Yeah, I mean, hosting is something we do in between defensive hacking.
Yeah, it was just all part of our liberal arts degrees.
On today's show, we'll tell you the story of how the FBI suckered criminals to use its own
messaging app, leading to hundreds of arrests around the world. Plus, we'll have headlines.
But first, the latest.
In the UK, the Delta variant is the rapidly emerging as the dominant variant,
greater than 60%. It is replacing the B.1.1.7.
That was Dr. Anthony Fauci during a briefing yesterday talking about the so-called Delta
variant of the coronavirus. It was first identified in India and has led to some growing concerns by world health officials about its spread.
We'll talk more about that in a moment. But first, Gideon, tell us where things stand in India
itself right now. Yeah, so the comparatively good news is that yesterday reportedly marked the first
time in over two months that India recorded less than 100,000 new cases in one day. Of course,
that is obviously a ton. But last month,
when the country was seeing a new peak, we were talking about daily numbers topping 400,000 times.
There is a really long way to go, however, and authorities there report that only about 4% of
the total population has been vaccinated thus far. But beginning later this month, all adults are
supposed to be able to access free vaccines. So that is a hopeful sign. Now that Delta variant
is believed to have played a major role in India's huge surge. And we're also learning more about it
as it has been detected in over 60 countries like the UK and the US. That's right. And Fauci was
talking about some of the information we've gotten out of the UK. So what's happening over there?
A lot. So the country's health secretary said on Monday that the Delta variant is at least
40% more infectious than the Alpha variant first found in the UK, which was already more infectious than
the original strain. So infectious upon infectious, not good. Plus, Delta is becoming the dominant
strain in the UK, as Fauci mentioned. And the tricky thing is that there's this important date
that's coming up, June 21st, which is when the UK is supposed to fully reopen after lots and lots
of lockdowns.
They, like us, have been pretty successful in vaccinating people with over 50% or so of adults
having received two doses so far. But the glass half empty part of that is that there are 50%
of people without protection. And recently, the UK has seen a doubling of cases in just about a
week. The overall numbers are much, much, much smaller
than previous surges because there have been so many vaccinations. But the country is in this sort
of wait and see mode before an ultimate decision on reopening gets made. Okay, so we mentioned how
contagious the Delta variant is believed to be. But what do we know about whether it makes people
more sick or how the vaccines work against it. Yeah, it's kind of challenging
to get a full definitive answer on the severity part. But on vaccines, the majority of new cases
in the UK are among the unvaccinated population. So it does look like you are protected if you are
vaccinated. And the serious cases are mostly people who are not vaccinated or only partially.
It does really seem as though the efficacy of one shot might drop a ton with
this variant. Then Bloomberg News reported that some doctors in India are seeing strange health
complications they believe to be linked to the Delta variant, including hearing impairment,
clotting, and gastric issues. But the read for now seems to be that people want to figure out
more definitively if it is causing more severe disease overall. Yeah, definitely. And to finish, let's bring it home to the US
and what Fauci was saying at the top of the show.
What do US health officials know so far
and what's the plan?
Yeah, so he also said that the variant accounts
for something like 6% of known new infections in the US.
That's compared to more than 60% of new infections
in the UK, so obviously a difference in scale.
But he added that two rounds of either the Pfizer
or AstraZeneca vaccine is about 88% effective at symptomatic disease. Those are the ones they're
using in the UK, with that rate dropping way off if you've only gotten one. So once again,
the plan seems to be to try and vaccinate more and more people to prevent any more spread of
this variant or others in the US. But there's evidence that vaccination rates are still
dropping in the country ahead of the Biden administration's July 4th goal. And now some state officials are concerned
that millions of doses of the J&J vaccine that they have on hand could actually expire soon after
sitting unused. So yeah, all of that is happening while there is a push for more of the U.S. surplus
to be sent abroad. We're going to follow that dynamic in the days to come, as well as more on this variant here and across the world.
Shifting gears, though, Akilah,
there is an absolutely wild story about the FBI,
an app, and a global sting.
What is happening here?
All right, so it is kind of cool
to have a weird, fun bit of news for once.
Anyway, so for three years,
high-profile criminals were using phones
equipped with a messaging app called Anim.
But if there was ever a lesson in learning to read the terms of service, it's this.
The app was run by the FBI, which is the last organization you want running an app where you plan your crimes.
Ain't that the truth.
So tell us about how it all shook out.
All right.
So for three years, the feds were engaged in Operation Trojan Shield.
Weird name. And basically, instead of trying to access data from an encrypted app and having to fight all theseloaded on phones distributed by FBI informants among crime rings. And it wasn't long
before higher level crime bosses started embracing it. Never trust a burner. So it's kind of like how
we all got on TikTok in the pandemic because people who used it seemed like they were having
some fun. Yeah, it's definitely something like that. I mean, the scope isn't quite TikTok numbers,
but some 12,000 encrypted devices
were used by upwards of 300 criminal syndicates
in more than 100 countries.
It was way more popular than Trump's short-lived blog,
but really that's not saying much.
Anyway, the data gathered was utilized
by law enforcement worldwide,
and it led to more than 800 arrests.
The crimes run the gamut from money laundering
to murder to illegal purchases,
including luxury vehicles and, of course, drugs.
They seized more than $48 million USD.
And in one sting, police seized three tons of drugs
and acted on 20, quote, threats to kill in Australia.
Here's Calvin Shivers
from the FBI's Criminal Investigative Division.
To give you an idea of the magnitude of our penetration,
we were able to actually see photographs of hundreds of tons of cocaine
that were concealed in shipments of fruit.
We were able to see hundreds of kilos of cocaine that were concealed in canned goods.
Honestly, relatively inventive to put drugs into a pineapple.
Points there, I suppose.
Interesting language to use as well.
Okay, so the secret is out now.
Why did the FBI tattle on itself if the app was working?
Well, they claim that their wiretap authorizations were almost up for renewal.
And since the sting had already gathered so much evidence,
they felt like they were all good on info, at least the info that they gathered on
their own app. But obviously this entire ruse was put together because law enforcement got tired of
working with companies like Apple and Facebook to retrieve encrypted messages as a way to skirt the
privacy those companies allow. Wild that you would have had a better chance of planning your
international crimes on Facebook, but that is the era that we're living in.
Everything is sus.
We'll let you know if any more details come through.
But that's the latest for now.
It's Wednesday, WOD Squad. it's wednesday wad squad and for today's temp check we're talking about what's to come in post-pandemic fashion specifically high heel crocs they're coming uh balenciaga revealed on sunday
that they're teaming up with crocs to make a shoe that's both mom on vacation and gen z hype beast
the stilettos look basically exactly how you think they'd look, and they will be sold alongside
new knee-high platform croc boots.
Balenciaga has worked with Crocs before to make $850 platform clogs that sold out almost
immediately.
The stilettos should sell fast, too, when they come out next spring.
So if you want to spring your ankle in Frankenstein's boat shoe, you'll have to move very quickly giddy my question for you would you cop and if not what summer looks will you be
trying out in the next few months i think i would keep it um as like a a token of this era um perhaps
try to sell it for like inflated chicken nugget prices um and see where things go from there. The summer look that I have been trying out recently
is basically that tweet that's like,
every guy just looks like that scene in Pulp Fiction
of Samuel L. Jackson and John Travolta
with long shirts and relatively short shorts.
Yeah.
Because it's just blisteringly hot
and I haven't figured out
another solve
beyond looking raggedy
like that.
Same question for you here,
Akilah.
What's the word on these?
If these cost more than
50 bucks like most Crocs,
sorry, I mean,
they're cheaper than that.
If it's more than most Crocs,
I just don't see me
spending the money
on a heel version
just because the pandemic
for me was about comfort.
I'm not ready
to break my foot again wearing heels.
It's okay if I'm a foot shorter than everyone at events.
I don't care.
My feet hurt.
My summer look seems to be like bike shorts, even though I don't have a bike anymore.
And like, you know, maybe just like tank tops and t-shirts as well.
It's very similar, but I like a bike short.
I feel like that's a nice way to not have your thighs chafing all up on each other, you know. Thick thighs save lives, but in the summer, it doesn't
feel that way. That is all for today. Stay safe, wear something cute this summer, and we'll be back
after some ads. Let's wrap up with some headlines. Headlines.
On Sunday, a man drove his pickup truck into a Muslim family of five,
killing four of them and seriously injuring the other at an intersection in the Canadian city of London, Ontario.
After what the police called a, quote, planned, premeditated attack motivated by hate,
the suspect was arrested Sunday night and has been charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has described the attacks as an act of terrorism and tweeted,
quote, to the Muslim community in London and to Muslims across the country,
know that we stand with you. Islamophobia has no place in any of our communities.
This hate is insidious and despicable, and it must stop.
Despite over 100 people getting arrested on Monday, activists are still camping out at a Minnesota construction site,
protesting against a $9.3 billion oil pipeline expansion project there. At the beginning of the week, indigenous leaders and more than 1,000 protesters chained themselves to construction equipment,
laid down in front of construction paths, and blocked access to workers.
This Enbridge energy oil
pipeline would expand the line's capacity to almost 800,000 barrels of oil per day.
Not only would it run through tribal land and violate treaties with Native American groups,
but critics say it could deepen North America's reliance on fossil fuels and pose an environmental
threat to Minnesota waterways in the case of oil spills. More than 200 activists are still
occupying the site, and protesters are calling on Joe Biden to call off the project.
Here's the latest on the billionaires-only edition of TurboTax that lets you select
keep all money. A new report from ProPublica found that 25 of the richest Americans,
including Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, and Warren Buffett, our favorite three gentlemen,
paid a true tax rate of only 3.4% in 2014 to 2018, even though their
net worths skyrocketed by $400 billion combined during that period. Now to compare, the average
American household pays 14% in federal taxes. So we get the pride of supporting crucial social
programs. Jeff Bezos gets a boat that contains 19 other boats for himself. The report says that
even though they technically aren't doing anything illegal,
billionaires have access to tax avoidance strategies that normal people do not have,
and they possess assets like stocks that grow but can't be taxed.
Skillfully zeroing in on the least important part of the story, though,
the IRS announced that it'll be investigating ProPublica
to find out how they were able to acquire the billionaire's confidential tax records.
Oh my gosh.
Come on, IRS.
Do something right for once.
Anyway, well, thankfully, rich guys are using all this money they're saving for good.
And by good, we mean racing each other to leave the planet.
That race got more interesting yesterday after rumors surfaced that Sir Richard Branson might try to ride in a rocket ship before his rival Jeff Bezos.
Bezos' Blue Origin will launch its first crewed flight on July 20th with Jeff and his
brother on board.
According to the space blog Parabolic Arc, Branson is now hoping to fly on one of his
Virgin Galactic spaceships on the weekend of July 4th.
Whoever gets to space first gets to tell the aliens it's against their best interest to
unionize.
Sorry, not your burden.
Branson's plan has reportedly been in the works for a while,
but it would require his company to get approval
from the Federal Aviation Administration.
Of course, the approval that matters here
cannot be found in government or in space.
It only exists in the cold distant eyes
of the businessman astronaut's dads.
Yeah, quick.
Someone tell them that you love them before they do this.
Just act like you're proud of them for five minutes, please.
Those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go,
a clarification on our story yesterday about the Supreme Court,
which ruled that immigrants with temporary protected status
are not eligible for a green card if they entered the U.S. unlawfully.
That ruling does not affect people with refugee status or who claimed asylum. That is all for today. If you like the show,
make sure you subscribe, leave a review. Be careful if you're in high heel clogs and tell
your friends to listen. And if you're into reading and not just encrypted crime texts at your job at
the FBI like me, well, today is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com
slash subscribe. I'm Akilah Hughes.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And there's still time to get to space, Warren Buffett.
Do it.
Just go today. What's stopping you?
Seriously. Weekend
before July 4th. No bookings
in space. It's all yours.
All that time you're not paying taxes, you should be getting ready
to go to space. It's all yours. All that time you're not paying taxes, you should be getting ready to go to space. Agreed.
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,
Akilah Hughes, and me. Our theme music
is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.