Sabtu, 18 April 2020

Americans answer Trump's call to 'liberate' states from governors' stringent coronavirus lockdowns - Daily Mail

Thousands of Americans answer Trump's call to 'liberate' states from governors' stringent coronavirus lockdowns with mass protests - as Floridians flood beaches the minute they are partially reopened

  • Demonstrators rallied in the streets waving huge USA flags and called for the country to reopen despite Covid
  • Thousands raced to Florida coastline after Governor Ron DeSantis gave the green light for to reopen beaches
  • Trump revealed his roadmap to reopen the economy, despite US being the worst-affected country by virus
  • The President also took to Twitter with the kind of rhetoric his supporters used to demand lifting of lockdown
  • In a bizarre tweet-storm, Trump posted: 'LIBERATE MINNESOTA!' 'LIBERATE MICHIGAN!' 'LIBERATE VIRGINIA' 
  • Learn more about how to help people impacted by COVID
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Americans have taken part in mass protests after President Donald Trump urged supporters to 'liberate' states from governors' stringent coronavirus lockdowns.

Demonstrators rallied in the streets waving huge USA flags and called for the country to reopen despite the pandemic ripping through the country.

Thousands raced to the Florida coastline after Governor Ron DeSantis gave the green light for municipalities to reopen beaches and parks if they deem it safe.

It comes after Trump revealed his roadmap to gradually reopen the crippled economy, even though America is the worst-affected country by Covid-19.

The President also took to Twitter with the kind of rhetoric some of his supporters have used in demanding the lifting of restrictions.

In a quickfire three-tweet storm, he posted: 'LIBERATE MINNESOTA!' 'LIBERATE MICHIGAN!' 'LIBERATE VIRGINIA.'

Thousands raced to the Florida coastline (pictured, Jacksonville Beach) after Governor Ron DeSantis gave the green light for municipalities to reopen beaches and parks if they deem it safe

Thousands raced to the Florida coastline (pictured, Jacksonville Beach) after Governor Ron DeSantis gave the green light for municipalities to reopen beaches and parks if they deem it safe

People are seen at the beach on Friday in Jacksonville Beach, Florida. The beaches reopened but only for restricted hours and can only be used for swimming, running, surfing, walking, biking, fishing, and taking care of pets

People are seen at the beach on Friday in Jacksonville Beach, Florida. The beaches reopened but only for restricted hours and can only be used for swimming, running, surfing, walking, biking, fishing, and taking care of pets

Despite the country being gripped by the terrifying pandemic, Floridians were quick to return to the sand and sea at Jacksonville (pcitured)

Despite the country being gripped by the terrifying pandemic, Floridians were quick to return to the sand and sea at Jacksonville (pcitured)

Thousands of Jacksonville residents poured onto the beaches on Friday as they reopened for the first time in weeks

This aerial shot shows thousands lined up across the beach at Jacksonville after Trump announced a three-phase plan for lifting the lockdown 

Demonstrators rallied in the streets (pictured, Huntington Beach, California) waving huge USA flags and called for the country to reopen despite the pandemic ripping through the country

Demonstrators rallied in the streets (pictured, Huntington Beach, California) waving huge USA flags and called for the country to reopen despite the pandemic ripping through the country

The protesters disregarded social distancing orders and flocked to the roads to protest against the state imposed shut downs

The protesters disregarded social distancing orders and flocked to the roads to protest against the state imposed shut downs

Meanwhile New York City (pictured, Washington Square Park) lies empty as New Yorkers are at the vanguard of the battle with the virus

Meanwhile New York City (pictured, Washington Square Park) lies empty as New Yorkers are at the vanguard of the battle with the virus

Three vultures linger over the empty New York City (pictured, the Hudson River) while the city's main occupants stay indoors

Three vultures linger over the empty New York City (pictured, the Hudson River) while the city's main occupants stay indoors

 

In a bizarre tweet-storm, he posted consecutively: 'LIBERATE MINNESOTA!' 'LIBERATE MICHIGAN!' 'LIBERATE VIRGINIA'

 In a bizarre tweet-storm, he posted consecutively: 'LIBERATE MINNESOTA!' 'LIBERATE MICHIGAN!' 'LIBERATE VIRGINIA'

He also lashed out at New York Gov Andrew Cuomo for criticising the federal response, saying he 'should spend more time "doing" and less time "complaining"'.

Responding to pleas from governors for help from Washington in ramping up testing for the virus, Trump put the burden back on them: 'The States have to step up their TESTING!'

Trump has repeatedly said he wants businesses to reopen quickly and claimed earlier this week he possesses total authority over the matter.

This is despite the lockdowns and other social-distancing measures being imposed by state and local leaders, not Washington.

Washington Governor Jay Inslee said on Friday Trump’s comments about 'liberating' parts of the country from coronavirus stay-at-home orders put millions of Americans at risk of contracting COVID-19.

The Democrat said in a statement Trump is encouraging 'illegal and dangerous acts', adding: 'His unhinged rantings and calls for people to "liberate" states could also lead to violence. We've seen it before.

'The president is fomenting domestic rebellion and spreading lies even while his own administration says the virus is real and is deadly.' 

Several hundred protesters defied social distancing guidelines and gathered outside Minnesota Governor Tim Walz' official residence in St. Paul on Friday demanding an end to the statewide coronavirus lockdown

Several hundred protesters defied social distancing guidelines and gathered outside Minnesota Governor Tim Walz' official residence in St. Paul on Friday demanding an end to the statewide coronavirus lockdown

Several hundred protesters gather outside Minnesota Governor Tim Walz' official residence in St. Paul, Minnesota, on Friday

Several hundred protesters gather outside Minnesota Governor Tim Walz' official residence in St. Paul, Minnesota, on Friday

Some of the protesters were cautious and stayed in their vehicles while others gathered in defiance of social distancing orders

Some of the protesters were cautious and stayed in their vehicles while others gathered in defiance of social distancing orders

Some of the protesters wore masks while others did not, and very few practiced social distancing in St. Paul on Friday

Some of the protesters wore masks while others did not, and very few practiced social distancing in St. Paul on Friday

One of the protesters unfurled a large banner featuring Trump's image superimposed on the American flag in St. Paul on Friday

One of the protesters unfurled a large banner featuring Trump's image superimposed on the American flag in St. Paul on Friday

Several of the protesters stayed in their vehicles and drove outside the governor's mansion in St. Paul on Friday

Several of the protesters stayed in their vehicles and drove outside the governor's mansion in St. Paul on Friday

A cardboard cutout of Donald Trump is propped up outside the Minnesota governor's official residence in St. Paul on Friday

A cardboard cutout of Donald Trump is propped up outside the Minnesota governor's official residence in St. Paul on Friday

One protester holds a sign which reads 'Be like Sweden' while another called the coronavirus pandemic a 'fake crisis'

One protester holds a sign which reads 'Be like Sweden' while another called the coronavirus pandemic a 'fake crisis'

The protesters are seen crowded together in violation of social distancing regulations in St. Paul on Friday

The protesters are seen crowded together in violation of social distancing regulations in St. Paul on Friday

A mock skeleton is attached to the fence as protesters gathered outside Walz' official residence on Friday

A mock skeleton is attached to the fence as protesters gathered outside Walz' official residence on Friday

One protester wearing a mask holds two signs which read 'Stop the Shutdown' and 'The models are wrong'

One protester wearing a mask holds two signs which read 'Stop the Shutdown' and 'The models are wrong'

Health officials and medical experts said that reopening the economy too soon could lead to another spike in coronavirus cases

Health officials and medical experts said that reopening the economy too soon could lead to another spike in coronavirus cases

Washington State saw the nation's first confirmed coronavirus case in January, as well as the first deadly cluster at a Seattle-area nursing home.

More than 11,150 people in Washington state have tested positive for the virus and more than 580 have died. The virus causes mild to moderate symptoms in most patients, and the vast majority recover. 

But it is highly contagious and can be spread by those who appear healthy and can cause severe illness and death in some patients, particularly the elderly and those with underlying health conditions.

In Huntington Beach, California, around 100 demonstrators defied the state's stay-at-home orders and gathered in downtown to protest the continued lockdown.

The protest, which was organised through social media, included people holding signs which read 'Live free or die.'

Some of the protesters periodically erupted in chants of 'USA! USA!' while motorists driving by honked their horns in support, The Orange County Register reported. 

'Our freedom has been taken away from us, people are locked in their homes,' Nicole Brown, a 50-year-old resident of Costa Mesa, told the Register.

Brown said that while she sympathized with those who fell ill with COVID-19, she believed that quarantining should be optional rather than mandated by the state.

Some of the protesters waved pro-Trump banners while another wore a mock white medical suit and held a sign calling coronavirus a 'lie.'

In Frankfort, Kentucky, a caravan-style protest was held as drivers drove around the state capitol denouncing Governor Andy Beshear's stay-at-home orders. 

Other protesters hold signs which read 'Free the humans' and 'We want to work' in St. Paul on Friday

Other protesters hold signs which read 'Free the humans' and 'We want to work' in St. Paul on Friday

One sign attached to the fence outside the Minnesota governor's residence reads 'Treat us like free Americans'

One sign attached to the fence outside the Minnesota governor's residence reads 'Treat us like free Americans'

Another protester holds a sign which reads 'My husband didn't serve 16 years in the military for tyranny!'

Another protester holds a sign which reads 'My husband didn't serve 16 years in the military for tyranny!'

One protester holds a sign which reads 'You do not have the right to decide what is essential for us!'

One protester holds a sign which reads 'You do not have the right to decide what is essential for us!'

'Freedom over fear! Open MN Now,' reads another sign attached to the fence of the governor's residence in St. Paul on Friday

'Freedom over fear! Open MN Now,' reads another sign attached to the fence of the governor's residence in St. Paul on Friday

Trump banners and an American flag with Trump's likeness superimposed on it are waved in St. Paul on Friday

Trump banners and an American flag with Trump's likeness superimposed on it are waved in St. Paul on Friday

Other protesters demanded that the governor, a Democrat, 'vacate now' and that he was 'not essential'

Other protesters demanded that the governor, a Democrat, 'vacate now' and that he was 'not essential'

One sign attached to the fence outside the governor's residence compares Walz to Adolf Hitler

One sign attached to the fence outside the governor's residence compares Walz to Adolf Hitler

One family is seen above holding several signs on the back of a pickup truck in St. Paul. 'God gave us an immune system for a reason' and 'Our constitutional rights are essential' read the signs

One family is seen above holding several signs on the back of a pickup truck in St. Paul. 'God gave us an immune system for a reason' and 'Our constitutional rights are essential' read the signs

Protesters, whose 'drive-thru' protest was in line with social distancing orders imposed by the state, told WKYT-TV that the governor's decision to shut down commerce was unconstitutional.

'When they started collecting license plate numbers that was one step too far,' said Brett Beaderson, one of the protesters. 

'And seeing what is happening in Michigan and other states, he needs to have some liberty pressure on him.'

Beaderson referred to Beshear's order banning gatherings of more than 10 people during Easter Sunday.

Beshear said that state officials would enforce the ban by collecting license plate numbers of local residents who attended church services in violation of stay-at-home orders. 

Dozens of people protesting Oregon’s stay-at-home order drove around the state Capitol on Friday, horns blaring, and a lawmaker asked the governor to ease restrictions for medical procedures for non-coronavirus patients.

The protest at the Capitol in Salem was one of several happening across the country this week as conservatives push back against virus-related restrictions meant to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

State Rep. Cheri Helt, a moderate Republican from Bend, credited Governor Kate Brown for imposing the stay-at-home order and social distancing. 

But she said in a letter it's time to 'slowly and carefully begin lifting regulations that have essentially shut down access to health care and medical procedures in Central Oregon for anything unrelated to COVID-19.'

Helt noted that the order has affected the health care industry and patients who must wait for procedures.     

A young girl is seen above cheering and waving small American flags as she peers out from the roof of a truck in St. Paul on Friday

A young girl is seen above cheering and waving small American flags as she peers out from the roof of a truck in St. Paul on Friday

A man wearing a red pro-Trump hat attends a demonstration in St. Paul, Minnesota, on Friday

A man wearing a red pro-Trump hat attends a demonstration in St. Paul, Minnesota, on Friday

Jason Lewis, a Republican candidate for the US Senate seat from Minnesota, shakes hands with protesters from his RV

Jason Lewis, a Republican candidate for the US Senate seat from Minnesota, shakes hands with protesters from his RV 

A man rolls his car down Summit Avenue in St. Paul on Friday during the 'Liberate Minnesota' protest outside the official residence of Governor Walz

A man rolls his car down Summit Avenue in St. Paul on Friday during the 'Liberate Minnesota' protest outside the official residence of Governor Walz

A woman leans out the window of her truck to take a selfie with fellow protesters during the 'Liberate Minnesota' protest in St. Paul on Friday

A woman leans out the window of her truck to take a selfie with fellow protesters during the 'Liberate Minnesota' protest in St. Paul on Friday

The crowd of protesters cheers as an American flag with the president's likeness is unfurled during the demonstration in St. Paul on Friday

The crowd of protesters cheers as an American flag with the president's likeness is unfurled during the demonstration in St. Paul on Friday

A woman above drives on a scooter while wearing a helmet designed to look like the coronavirus on Friday

A woman above drives on a scooter while wearing a helmet designed to look like the coronavirus on Friday

A supporter of the Democratic governor confronts protesters who oppose the coronavirus lockdown in St. Paul on Friday

A supporter of the Democratic governor confronts protesters who oppose the coronavirus lockdown in St. Paul on Friday

Another supporter of the governor holds a sign which reads 'GR8 FULL 4 R Governor' in St. Paul on Friday

Another supporter of the governor holds a sign which reads 'GR8 FULL 4 R Governor' in St. Paul on Friday

Another protester inside a car sticks out a sign which reads 'Don't cancel my golf season' during the demonstration in St. Paul on Friday

Another protester inside a car sticks out a sign which reads 'Don't cancel my golf season' during the demonstration in St. Paul on Friday

A St. Paul police officer leans back against his vehicle during the demonstration in the state capital on Friday

A St. Paul police officer leans back against his vehicle during the demonstration in the state capital on Friday

One protester (right) holds a sign which read 'If ballots don't free us bullets will!' during the demonstration in St. Paul on Friday

One protester (right) holds a sign which read 'If ballots don't free us bullets will!' during the demonstration in St. Paul on Friday

A protester (right) wears a jacket with an emblazoned American flag on the back during the demonstration in St. Paul on Friday

A protester (right) wears a jacket with an emblazoned American flag on the back during the demonstration in St. Paul on Friday

An estimated 400 people attended the rally outside the governor's official residence in St. Paul, Minnesota, on Friday

An estimated 400 people attended the rally outside the governor's official residence in St. Paul, Minnesota, on Friday

Some hospitals in Oregon have seen revenue decline as much as 60 per cent in a month, Becky Hultberg, CEO of the Oregon Association of Hospitals and Health Systems, said recently.

Meanwhile the Oregon Health Authority reported six new COVID-19 deaths Friday for a total of 70 in the state.

State officials also reported 49 new cases, increasing to 1,785 the total number of people statewide who have tested positive for the disease.

Organizers said the Salem rally was aimed at getting their constitutional rights back and getting Oregonians back to work, KEZI-TV reported. 

Brown issued an order for Oregonians to stay home starting March 23 and banned non-essential gatherings and travel after crowds descended on the state’s beach towns and hiking trails the previous weekend.

Brown said earlier this week that she won’t reopen Oregon’s economy or ease restrictions until she sees a declining rate of active virus cases and public health data suggesting a return to normalcy is safe.

Also on Friday, Brown signed an executive order to prevent creditors or debt collectors from garnishing federal coronavirus aid bill payments.

'Many Oregonians, through no fault of their own, are struggling to pay their bills, their rent, or even buy essentials like groceries and prescription drugs,' Brown said in a news release. 

'These recovery checks were meant to provide relief, not reward debt collection agencies for preying on Oregonians who have lost their livelihoods due to the COVID-19 pandemic.'

Additionally, The Oregonian/OregonLive reported that the coronavirus has so far infected 10 people who live or work in state-funded homes for people with intellectual or developmental disabilities.

The disease has struck one person in 10 separate homes: a foster home for children, three foster homes for adults and six adult group homes, according to data state officials provided to The Oregonian/OregonLive.

The homes are in southern Oregon, with one case each in Jackson and Klamath counties, in the Willamette Valley, with four cases in Marion, Lane and Linn counties, and in the Portland area, with four infected homes in Clackamas, Washington and Multnomah counties.

On Thursday, the president detailed a three-step set of guidelines for easing restrictions over a span of several weeks in places that have robust testing and are seeing a decrease in COVID-19 cases, assuring the nation's governors: 'You're going to call your own shots.'

Governors of both parties Friday suggested they would be cautious in returning to normal, with some of them warning that they can't do it without help from Washington to expand testing.

Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat who has been critical of the government's response to the crisis, acknowledged that people are 'very anxious' about their livelihoods and worried about paying the rent when they are out of work.

'But the last thing I want to do is to have a second wave here, so we've got to be really smart,' she said. 

A man dressed in colonial style clothing waves a flag in the air and blows an airhorn from the back of a truck

A man dressed in colonial style clothing waves a flag in the air and blows an airhorn from the back of a truck

A man wearing a t-shirt with a pro-gun rights message holds an American flag during the protest in St. Paul on Friday

A man wearing a t-shirt with a pro-gun rights message holds an American flag during the protest in St. Paul on Friday

Protesters outside the Oregon State Capitol in Salem, Oregon, drive around on Friday

Protesters outside the Oregon State Capitol in Salem, Oregon, drive around on Friday 

Several protesters waved American flags and brandished banners in favor of Trump during the protest in Salem on Friday

Several protesters waved American flags and brandished banners in favor of Trump during the protest in Salem on Friday

These protesters are seen outside the State Capitol in Salem, Oregon, on Friday during a demonstration

These protesters are seen outside the State Capitol in Salem, Oregon, on Friday during a demonstration

Governor Kate Brown, a Democrat, is under pressure to lift restrictions aimed at curbing the spread of the coronavirus

Governor Kate Brown, a Democrat, is under pressure to lift restrictions aimed at curbing the spread of the coronavirus

Some protesters hold signs which read 'Re-Open Florida' and 'Everyone's Essential' in Orlando on Friday

Some protesters hold signs which read 'Re-Open Florida' and 'Everyone's Essential' in Orlando on Friday

The protests in Orlando were condemned by local leaders who accused the crowd of endangering themselves and others during a pandemic

The protests in Orlando were condemned by local leaders who accused the crowd of endangering themselves and others during a pandemic

Several protesters wave American flags and banners in support of President Trump during a demonstration in Orlando on Friday

Several protesters wave American flags and banners in support of President Trump during a demonstration in Orlando on Friday

A truck supporting protesters demanding Florida businesses and government reopen honks at a gathering in downtown Orlando on Friday

A truck supporting protesters demanding Florida businesses and government reopen honks at a gathering in downtown Orlando on Friday

Small-government groups, supporters of President Donald Trump, anti-vaccine advocates, gun rights backers and supporters of right-wing causes have united behind a deep suspicion of efforts to shut down daily life to slow the spread of the coronavirus. Protesters are seen above in downtown Orlando on Friday

Small-government groups, supporters of President Donald Trump, anti-vaccine advocates, gun rights backers and supporters of right-wing causes have united behind a deep suspicion of efforts to shut down daily life to slow the spread of the coronavirus. Protesters are seen above in downtown Orlando on Friday

West Virginia Governor Jim Justice, a Republican ally of Trump's, endorsed the White House plan but made clear that he will listen to medical experts in deciding how to move forward. 

He said more testing is needed before any restrictions can be rolled back. 

'I am not going to do something that I feel in my heart is the wrong thing that´s going to endanger our people,' he said.

Other states did take some of the nation's first, small steps toward loosening restrictions.

In Florida, GOP Governor Ron DeSantis gave the green light for municipalities to reopen beaches and parks if they can do so safely. 

In Texas, Republican Governor Greg Abbott said stores can begin selling curbside, nonessential surgery can resume and state parks can reopen.

Cuomo, whose state is the most lethal hot spot in the nation and is still seeing over 600 deaths a day, accused the government of 'passing the buck without passing the bucks.'

'The federal government cannot wipe its hands of this and say, "Oh, the states are responsible for testing." 

'We cannot do it. We cannot do it without federal help,' he said.

Even in largely rural states with small populations, like Wyoming, Maine and South Dakota, governors said they were not anxious to quickly resume business as usual. 

One protester holds a sign which reads 'Practice media distancing' in Orlando on Friday

One protester holds a sign which reads 'Practice media distancing' in Orlando on Friday

 

A woman wears an American flag-themed bandanna during a protest in Orlando, Florida, on Friday

A woman wears an American flag-themed bandanna during a protest in Orlando, Florida, on Friday

A group of about 100 protesters gathered in downtown Huntington Beach, California, on Friday to protest the state's stay-at-home orders

A group of about 100 protesters gathered in downtown Huntington Beach, California, on Friday to protest the state's stay-at-home orders

The protest was organized through social media and included people waving Trump banners on Friday

The protest was organized through social media and included people waving Trump banners on Friday

One of the protesters holds a sign which reads 'Liberate Huntington Beach!' on Friday

One of the protesters holds a sign which reads 'Liberate Huntington Beach!' on Friday

Several motorists who were driving by the protest honked in support while police officers were on the scene

Several motorists who were driving by the protest honked in support while police officers were on the scene

A caravan-style protest was staged outside the state capitol in Frankfort, Kentucky, on Friday

A caravan-style protest was staged outside the state capitol in Frankfort, Kentucky, on Friday

'Until we've got the testing up to speed - which has got to be part of the federal government stepping in and helping - we're just not going to be there,' said Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon, a Republican.

Worldwide, the outbreak has infected nearly 2.2 million people and killed over 145,000, according to a Johns Hopkins University tally based on figures supplied by government health authorities around the globe, though it has becoming increasingly clear that the true numbers are much higher.

The official death toll in the US neared 34,000, with more than 670,000 confirmed infections.

The shutdowns have inflicted heavy damage on economies around the world. In the US, the crisis has cost at least 22 millions Americans their jobs, pushing the unemployment rate toward levels not seen since the Great Depression.

Many Americans, especially in rural areas and other parts of the country that have not seen major outbreaks, have urged governors to reopen their economies. 

Protesters have taken to the streets in Ohio, Texas, North Carolina, Kentucky, Virginia and Michigan, where more than 3,000 turned out on Wednesday in what looked like one of the president's rallies, with MAGA hats and Trump flags.

Protests continued Friday, including one outside the home of Governor Tim Walz of Minnesota and another in Idaho, where the governor is a Republican.

Grassroots Trump supporters organized the protest under the theme 'Liberate Minnesota.'

Motorists circled the capitol and denounced the state's Democratic governor, Andy Beshear. One anti-abortion protester drove by with a sign attached to their vehicle in Frankfort on Friday

Motorists circled the capitol and denounced the state's Democratic governor, Andy Beshear. One anti-abortion protester drove by with a sign attached to their vehicle in Frankfort on Friday

'Let us work,' one sign displayed from inside a vehicle in Frankfort read on Friday

'Let us work,' one sign displayed from inside a vehicle in Frankfort read on Friday

A Kentucky state trooper is seen above looking on at the motorcade protest outside the capitol in Frankfort on Friday

A Kentucky state trooper is seen above looking on at the motorcade protest outside the capitol in Frankfort on Friday

Another motorist who took part in the protest attached a sign to their vehicle which read 'It's about liberty' in Frankfort on Friday

Another motorist who took part in the protest attached a sign to their vehicle which read 'It's about liberty' in Frankfort on Friday

Another motorist demanded that the governor 'open Kentucky back up!' in Frankfort on Friday

Another motorist demanded that the governor 'open Kentucky back up!' in Frankfort on Friday

It was one of several taking place across the country this week as conservatives push back against restrictions imposed to slow the spread of COVID-19.

At least 400 people gathered outside the mansion on Summit Avenue to demand relief. Many wore pro-Trump gear. 

Very few practiced social distancing or wore masks. Dozens carried American flags or signs bearing messages such as 'Reopen MN.' 

Others drove past in vehicles bearing signs against the restrictions.

Republican US Senate candidate Jason Lewis, who has made reopening businesses a focus of his campaign to unseat Democratic Senator Tina Smith, expressed support for the protesters as he made several passes past the mansion in his campaign RV.

Trump tweeted 'LIBERATE MINNESOTA!' along with similar tweets for Michigan and Virginia, one day after he gave governors a road map for recovering from the economic pain of the public health crisis. 

The guidelines make clear that a return to normalcy will take far longer than Trump initially envisioned, and let governors call the shots.

Walz didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on the protest and tweets. 

He recently extended the state's stay-at-home order to May 4. 

He has said the state needs to significantly expand its testing capacity before it can begin relaxing restrictions, despite increasing pressure from Republicans to move quickly.

The number of people infected with the coronavirus has climbed by 159 to 2,071, while 17 new fatalities have raised the state's death toll to 111, the Minnesota Department of Health reported.  

The governor announced strict stay-at-home measures and enforcement policies throughout the state due to the coronavirus pandemic

The governor announced strict stay-at-home measures and enforcement policies throughout the state due to the coronavirus pandemic

Another motorist holds up a sign which read 'Let us work!' while driving around the capitol in Frankfort on Friday

Another motorist holds up a sign which read 'Let us work!' while driving around the capitol in Frankfort on Friday

As of Friday, 223 patients were hospitalized - 10 more than Thursday - and 106 of them were in intensive care, an increase of three. 

But 1,066 patients have recovered and no longer need isolation.

Trump's tweet got a 'thank you' tweet from Lewis, as he kicked off a 'Re-Open Minnesota for Business' tour of the state Friday. 

The former congressman and talk radio host says he wants the economy to reopen while protecting the vulnerable.He plans to visit small business owners at their shuttered locations across the state in the coming weeks. 

Walz loosened some restrictions Friday by signing an executive order that allows residents to golf, boat, fish, hunt and hike as long as they follow new outdoor recreation guidelines: maintain six feet of social distancing; avoid crowded areas; and stay close to home.

Businesses that could reopen starting Saturday include golf courses, bait shops, marinas and outdoor shooting ranges. 

Campgrounds, recreational equipment retail and rental stores, charter boats and guided fishing remain closed.

Public health experts have warned that an easing of the shutdowns must be accompanied by wider testing and tracing of infected people to keep the virus from coming back with a vengeance. 

The clash between Trump and Cuomo was personal, with the president complaining the governor hasn't said thanks for the help he has received from Washington. 

Cuomo countered by saying: 'I don't know what I'm supposed to do, send a bouquet of flowers? "Thank you to the federal government for participating in a federal emergency".'

Meanwhile, China, confirming long-held suspicions, acknowledged that the coronavirus death toll in the one-time epicenter city of Wuhan was nearly 50% higher than reported, amounting to more than 4,600.      

In Italy, Spain, Britain, the United States and elsewhere, similar doubts emerged as governments revised their death tolls or openly questioned the accuracy of them.

Authorities said that almost everywhere, thousands have died with COVID-19 symptoms - many in nursing homes - without being tested for the virus, and have thus gone uncounted.

'We are probably only seeing the tip of the iceberg,' said Barcelona University epidemiologist Antoni Trilla, who heads the Spanish government's expert panel on the crisis.

In Italy, for example, where the official toll has climbed past 22,000, a government survey released Friday of about one-third of the country's nursing homes found more than 6,000 residents have died since February 1. 

It was unclear how many were a result of COVID-19.

In Britain, with an official count of about 14,600 dead, the country´s statistics agency said the actual number could be around 15 per cent higher. 

Others think it will be far more.

The official death toll in New York City soared by more than half earlier this week when health authorities began including people who probably had COVID-19 but died without being tested. 

Nearly 3,800 deaths were added to the city´s count.

'There is a general feeling that the epidemiologists don't have a clue of what's going on, that experts know even less and that governments are concealing information, but I don't think that's true,' said Hermelinda Vanaclocha, an epidemiologist on Spain's top virus advisory panel. 

'It's simply not easy.'

Such figures can have a huge influence on governments' actions, as medical staffs struggle to figure out how to cope with surges of sick people and officials make crucial decisions about where to devote resources and how to begin easing lockdowns to resuscitate their economies.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMijAFodHRwczovL3d3dy5kYWlseW1haWwuY28udWsvbmV3cy9hcnRpY2xlLTgyMzIyNTMvQW1lcmljYW5zLWFuc3dlci1UcnVtcHMtY2FsbC1saWJlcmF0ZS1zdGF0ZXMtZ292ZXJub3JzLXN0cmluZ2VudC1jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1sb2NrZG93bnMuaHRtbNIBkAFodHRwczovL3d3dy5kYWlseW1haWwuY28udWsvbmV3cy9hcnRpY2xlLTgyMzIyNTMvYW1wL0FtZXJpY2Fucy1hbnN3ZXItVHJ1bXBzLWNhbGwtbGliZXJhdGUtc3RhdGVzLWdvdmVybm9ycy1zdHJpbmdlbnQtY29yb25hdmlydXMtbG9ja2Rvd25zLmh0bWw?oc=5

2020-04-18 11:00:03Z
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Coronavirus may have started spreading as early as September and it may not have originated in Wuhan - Daily Mail

Coronavirus may have started spreading as early as September and it may not have originated in Wuhan, say British scientists who are studying its mutations

  • Peter Forster led team of researchers at University of Cambridge in the UK 
  • Researchers sought to trace first cases of the novel coronavirus 
  • They discovered that coronavirus had three separate strands - A, B, and C 
  • Forster's researchers found that Wuhan was primarily hit with Type B strand
  • They believe Type B may have migrated from elsewhere to the city 
  • Learn more about how to help people impacted by COVID

A British geneticist investigating the origins of the coronavirus says that the pathogen may have started spreading as early as mid-September and that Wuhan may not be where the pandemic started.

Peter Forster of the University of Cambridge has led a team of researchers who are trying to trace the source of the virus by mapping its genetic history in an effort to identify the first person who was infected.

According to Newsweek, Forster and his team have been able to chart the spread of the virus, including genetic mutations, as it moved from China to Australia to Europe and the rest of the world.

The Cambridge researchers mapped the genetic history of the infection from December to March and found three distinct, but closely related, variants – A, B, and C.

A woman stands near the Han River in Wuhan, China, on Friday. British scientists say there is a possibility that the coronavirus did not originate in the city

A woman stands near the Han River in Wuhan, China, on Friday. British scientists say there is a possibility that the coronavirus did not originate in the city

Dr Peter Forster of the University of Cambridge found that coronavirus had three strands - Type A, Type B, and Type C

Dr Peter Forster of the University of Cambridge found that coronavirus had three strands - Type A, Type B, and Type C

The genetic history of the coronavirus was mapped from December 24 to March 4, revealing three distinct, but closely related, variants. Scientists believe the virus may be constantly mutating to overcome differing levels of immune system resistance in different populations

Type A is believed to be the closest variant to that which was found in bats and is thought to be the original human virus genome.

This variant was found in both Chinese and American patients, though mutated versions of this strain was reported in Australia and the United States.

While Australian authorities are struggling to find a cure for the original virus which developed from animals, they're also battling a mutation known as strain C.

Type A is the most prevalent in Australia, however Type C has also been recorded in Sydney, according to the experts.

Analysis of the strains showed type A - the original virus that jumped to humans from bats via pangolins - was not China's most common.

Instead, the pandemic's ground-zero was mainly hit by type B, which was in circulation as far back as Christmas Eve.

Type B was also the dominant strain across large parts of the United Kingdom and Europe.

According to Forster, type B was also the variant that was found in most cases of infection reported in Wuhan.

Research suggests that there was a ‘founder event’ for type B in Wuhan.

In biology, a founder event is when a new population is established from a small number of individuals drawn from a large ancestral population.

According to Forster, up until January 17, nearly all of the coronavirus variants found in Wuhan were type B.

The researchers found that in Guangdong, a province about 500 miles from Wuhan, seven of the 11 samples found in patients were type A.

A team of researchers at the University of Cambridge found evidence suggesting that the coronavirus may have started spreading as early as September. A woman in Maryland (above) tends to the body of a COVID-19 victim at a morgue in Montgomery County on Friday

A team of researchers at the University of Cambridge found evidence suggesting that the coronavirus may have started spreading as early as September. A woman in Maryland (above) tends to the body of a COVID-19 victim at a morgue in Montgomery County on Friday

Type C was an offshoot of type B, mutating from the secondary strain and spreading to Europe and Australia via Singapore.

Scientists believe the virus - officially called SARS-CoV-2 - is constantly mutating to overcome immune system resistance in different populations.

The data gathered by Forster and his team indicate that the coronavirus outbreak apparently started sometime between September 13 and December 7.

‘This assumes a constant mutation rate, which is admittedly unlikely to be the case, and the time estimate could therefore be wrong,’ Forster told Newsweek.

‘But it is the best assumption we can make at the moment, pending analysis of further patient samples stored in hospitals during 2019.’

The academics' published work - which has been scrutinised by fellow scientists - only traced the samples of 160 patients across the world, including many of the first cases in Europe and the US.

Methods used to trace the prehistoric migration of ancient humans were adapted to track the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which causes COVID-19.

The team have now updated their analysis to include more than 1,000 COVID-19 cases up to the end of March to provide a clearer snapshot.

The smaller snapshot, published in the journal PNAS, initially suggested that type C was the most common in Europe.

Animal viruses can mutate or combine with other viruses to create new strains capable of being passed to people.

Scientists say the new coronavirus originated in bats and then passed to humans, possibly via an intermediary animal species.

The broad scientific consensus holds SARS-CoV-2, the virus’ official name, originated in bats.

Scientists suspect, but have not proven, that the new coronavirus passed to humans from bats via pangolins, a small ant-eating mammal whose scales are highly prized in traditional Chinese medicine.

Some of the earliest infections were found in people who had exposure to Wuhan’s seafood market, where bats, snakes, civets and other wildlife were sold.

China temporarily shut down all such markets in January, warning that eating wild animals posed a threat to public health and safety.

The first known coronavirus case was reported on November 17, when a 55-year-old from Hubei province near Wuhan was diagnosed with COVID-19.

Experts, however, still do not know for certain where and how the virus made the leap from animals to humans.

China pushes back on Trump administration coronavirus theory that pathogen originated in Wuhan lab

China is pushing back against President Donald Trump and some of his officials, who’ve flirted in recent days with an outlier theory that the coronavirus was set loose by a Chinese lab that let it escape.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman on Friday accused the US administration of attempting to shift the focus from its own missteps in dealing with the pandemic by talking up a theory that it was started by a pathogen from a laboratory in Wuhan, the city where the global outbreak began.

But that spokesman, Zhao Lijian, has demonstrated that China, too, is not above sowing confusion in the face of the pandemic. 

He tweeted in March the falsehood that the virus might have come from the US Army.

A scientific consensus is still evolving, but the leading theory is that infection among humans began at an animal market in Wuhan, probably from an animal that got the virus from a bat.

Without the weight of evidence, Trump and some administration officials are trying to blame China for sickness and death from COVID-19 in the United States.

American officials have raised the possibility that the coronavirus originated inside the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan (above)

American officials have raised the possibility that the coronavirus originated inside the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan (above)

'More and more, we’re hearing the story,' Trump says. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo adds, 'The mere fact that we don’t know the answers — that China hasn’t shared the answers — I think is very, very telling.'

On Friday, Pompeo said the US is pressing China to let outside experts into the lab 'so that we can determine precisely where this virus began.'

Asked on Fox Business Network about whether China might have manipulated the virus for sinister purposes, he said, 'It is completely appropriate that the world ask the right questions,' then diverted to another subject.

Trump officials have largely been steering clear of baseless conspiracy theories in circulation that the virus was intentionally set loose by China, even as some give weight to the unsubstantiated idea the virus mistakenly spread from a negligent lab in Wuhan.

Experts overwhelmingly say analysis of the new coronavirus’s genome rules out the possibility that it was engineered by humans, as some commentators have suggested.

Nor is it likely that the virus emerged from a negligent laboratory in Wuhan, they say. 

'I would put it on a list of 1,000 different scenarios,' said Nathan Grubaugh of Yale University, who studies the epidemiology of microbial disease.

Even so, Pompeo and others are pointing fingers at an institute that is run by the Chinese Academy of Sciences and has done groundbreaking research tracing the likely origins of the SARS virus, finding new bat viruses and discovering how they could jump to people.

'We know that there is the Wuhan Institute of Virology just a handful of miles away from where the wet market was,' Pompeo said. 

The institute has an address 8 miles, or 13 kilometers, from the market.

US officials say the American Embassy in Beijing flagged concerns about potential safety issues at the lab in Wuhan in 2018, but stressed there’s no evidence the virus originated there nearly two years later.

The episode shows that both world powers — the country where the virus originally spread and the country with the most sickness and deaths from it — are willing to use shaky theories and propaganda to divert attention from problems in their pandemic response.

At a briefing Friday, Zhao asserted that suspicions about the lab were generated by the US 'simply to confuse the public, divert attention and shirk responsibility.' 

President Trump (above) has turned to blaming China and halting US contributions to the World Health Organization, accusing it of parroting misinformation from Beijing

President Trump (above) has turned to blaming China and halting US contributions to the World Health Organization, accusing it of parroting misinformation from Beijing

He added: 'We have said many times that tracing of the virus’s origin is a serious scientific issue and requires scientific and professional assessment.'

Yet on March 12, he tweeted: 'It might be US army who brought the epidemic to Wuhan.. Be transparent! Make public your data! US owe us an explanation!'

Lea Gabrielle, head of the State Department’s Global Engagement Center, said in late March that China was heavily pushing the fabrication that the virus came from the US, especially to its online audiences in Africa. 

China dropped the claim late that month because people weren’t buying it.

China and the US both wasted crucial time responding to the outbreak.

More than 3,000 people had been infected before China’s government told the public what it had concluded six days earlier — that a pandemic was probably coming.

Beijing muffled early warnings, such that the Chinese were assured the risk of sustained human-to-human transmission was low even as infected people entered hospitals across the country and the first case outside China was found, in Thailand.

The United States, also late to take the threat seriously, has lagged a number of other countries in the thick of the pandemic when it comes to its response.

Trump failed to live up to his early promises to have ample testing, a key factor in containing disease. 

The US still struggles to supply hospitals, front-line workers and patients with necessities in a climate of confusion spilling into chaos. 

More than 670,000 people in the US have been sickened with COVID-19, not counting large numbers whose illnesses are not being registered, and more than 33,000 have died, according to figures compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Against that backdrop, the pressure for scapegoats is strong.

After weeks of elaborate praise of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s performance in the pandemic, Trump has turned to blaming China and halting US contributions to the World Health Organization, accusing it of parroting misinformation from Beijing.

In the US, claims that the virus was created in or released from a Chinese lab emerged just weeks after the outbreak began and quickly spread from fringe internet sites to the wider public.

The reality is more mundane, said Dr. Gregory Poland, head of vaccine research at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. 

'This virus is a typical bat coronavirus that has developed the capacity to infect other mammals, and bats are mammals, too,' he said. 

'What’s becoming evident is that the natural origin of this fits with the transmission dynamics and biology of it all.'   

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2020-04-18 09:32:30Z
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Trump cheers as anti-lockdown protests spread - Financial Times

Conservative activists cheered on in some cases by Donald Trump are vowing to step up street protests against lockdowns imposed to stop the spread of coronavirus, arguing the restrictions violate their civil rights and threaten their ability to earn a living.

The demonstrations in recent days have echoes of the anti-establishment agitation that led to the rise of the Tea Party movement a decade ago, and have involved activists who customarily espouse more traditional rightwing causes — such as the fight against gun control measures.

Denny Tubbs, 67, a local leader of Ohio Stands United, a gun rights group, said he would attend a protest on Saturday in the state capital of Columbus against closures ordered by Mike DeWine, a Republican governor.

“I’m not saying it doesn’t have to be dealt with [but] shutting down and crushing the economy is not the way to do it,” said Mr Tubbs, a gunmaker by trade. “Our civil rights have been stomped on.”

While the unrest so far has only involved a relatively small number of people in states including Minnesota, Michigan, Kentucky, Pennsylvania and Florida, it comes as the US president has raised expectations for a lifting of restrictions while the US death toll from the pandemic nears 35,000.

Mr Trump took to Twitter to support the protests on Friday, a day after he backed away from claims that he had “total” authority to reopen the economy and said state governors should make such decisions, based on his guidelines.

“LIBERATE MINNESOTA,” he wrote, before adding, “LIBERATE MICHIGAN”, referring in both cases to Midwestern states where protesters have taken aim at restrictions ordered by Democratic governors.

Asked whether he was fomenting civil unrest, Mr Trump said he believed some of the protests were warranted given the “too tough” restrictions imposed by a handful of governors. 

“These are people expressing their views,” the president said at his daily White House briefing. “They seem to be very responsible people to me. But they’ve been treated very rough.”

Several hundred people gathered on Friday outside the residence of Tim Walz, Minnesota’s Democratic governor, to protest with placards that had slogans such as “Facts not Fear”. Footage of the event revealed that the overwhelming majority of them were not practising social distancing. 

In Michigan, the state with the fifth-highest number of Covid-19 cases, protests erupted after Gretchen Whitmer, a Democratic governor who has been seen as a possible vice-presidential running mate for Joe Biden, tightened and extended restrictions.

Matthew Seeley, a member of the Michigan Conservative Coalition that organised protests against the governor’s policies, said he supported the initial lockdown. But he said new restrictions — such as on what items can be sold in stores — were intolerable.

“The solution cannot be lock every American in their home, let the economy collapse and when the last case is resolved, you can emerge from your hole in the ground,” said Mr Seeley, a Republican councilman from a Detroit suburb. “It’s not sustainable.”

Some businesses have also raised objections. In Columbus, Ohio, the owner of Gilded Social, a shop that caters for bridal parties, has filed a lawsuit against Amy Acton, the director of Ohio’s health department who has been nicknamed “Doctor Death” by some of her critics. 

Maurice Thompson, head of the 1851 Center for Constitutional Law who represents Gilded Social, said the suit was “not a haymaker suggesting the government cannot have regulations to protect people from a pandemic”.

He said businesses should be able to appeal and also to petition to be considered an essential business, particularly since the penalty for disobedience is up to 150 days in jail.

The resistance has been fortified by conservative media. Tucker Carlson, a Fox News host, this week interviewed the Democratic governor of New Jersey, Phil Murphy, about his stay-at-home order and asked: “By what authority did you nullify the Bill of Rights?”

Tom Zawistowski, a well-known conservative activist in Ohio, said “civil disobedience” would be the next step if the situation was not remedied by May 1. “We’re gonna tell them go to hell, you can’t tell me what to do,” he said. “Our government’s job is to represent us, protect our rights and instead they turn into tyrants, including a Republican like Mike DeWine.”

Polls suggest a majority of Americans support lockdown measures, with one survey by the Pew Charitable Trust saying that two-thirds are worried the restrictions would be lifted too soon.

Nan Whaley, the Democratic mayor of Dayton, Ohio, said Mr Trump was “detached from reality” in promoting an end to lockdowns because cities lack the capability to implement the Covid-19 testing needed to safely reopen. She estimated as much as 20 per cent of people in her state harbour anti-lockdown sentiments.

“There are groups of people that value their economic liberty over someone else’s human life,” she said. “We want to get people’s liberty back when we have PPE [personal protective equipment] and testing. But I have a hard time with ‘let ’em die’ attitude.”

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2020-04-18 08:34:16Z
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