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USANews版 - 又来抽老共和党人的脸了
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话题: protests话题: new话题: fox话题: news
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d********f
发帖数: 43471
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这几位民主党籍什么时候开除?或者也帮他们入个共和党?
Anti-police demonstrations may have sparked new coronavirus cases, some
cities now acknowledge
Several big-city mayors and top officials are acknowledging that weeks of
anti-police protests and riots may have contributed to surging coronavirus
rates, weeks after Democrats and even some epidemiologists openly encouraged
Black Lives Matter allies to demonstrate in the streets.
In public statements and interviews with Fox News this weekend, officials in
Los Angeles, Seattle and Miami-Dade County, Fla., have indicated that some
link between protests and new cases was at least possible. Still, many
officials declined to comment when contacted by Fox News this weekend, and
others – including New York Mayor Bill de Blasio's office – disputed that
the protests had caused any issue.
"Based on our health indicators, which measure hospital admissions, number
of people in ICU and percentage of New Yorkers testing positive, we have
seen no indication of an uptick in cases," Avery Cohen, de Blasio's deputy
press secretary, told Fox News.
WNBC reported on July 4 that "over the course of a week, New York's daily
death toll has stayed constant, but its percentage of positive coronavirus
cases rose four days straight." New York City, though, has seen cases
steadily decreasing over the last few months, while Los Angeles, Seattle and
Miami have seen recent spikes.
Responding to that report, Cohen asserted that the number of New Yorkers
testing positive "remains at a steady 2 percent, far below the nationwide
average," and that, "at this time, we do not believe there has been a
resurgence in cases related to the protests, which reached their peak over a
month ago."
Cohen's public Twitter feed explicitly praised the Black Lives Matter
movement and encouraged mass protests. One June 28 post retweeted by Cohen
read: "Are you ready to flood the streets to fight for Black lives and
against police brutality and reclaim our roots of pride? Join us today at 1
PM at FOLEY SQUARE."
New York officials were previously less tolerant of mass gatherings — at
least, for certain religious groups. In April, de Blasio told the Jewish
community that "the time for warnings has passed" after he said a funeral
gathering had violated social distancing guidelines.
New York's current position differs markedly from assessments by officials
in Los Angeles and elsewhere. Last Wednesday, Los Angeles Mayor Eric
Garcetti acknowledged that public protests likely were causing a coronavirus
spike, just two days after claiming there wasn't "any conclusive evidence"
showing a connection between the two. De Blasio, like Garcetti, has defended
demonstrators, saying they were participating in a "historical moment."
"I talked again with Dr. Ferrer about that this morning," Garcetti said,
referencing Dr. Barbara Ferrer, the L.A. County public-health director. "She
does think some of the spread did come from our protests," he added. "It’s
not the act of protesting — that’s a great and American thing to do no
matter what your opinion is... but protesting without maintaining physical
distancing, without wearing your mask, without having sanitizer – we just
have to be smart. Whether you’re at a protest or at your home, whether in
your workplace or whether you’re out shopping, these rules don’t change."
Cohen responded, "Los Angeles is facing a resurgence; we have seen no such
equivalent in New York City."
New York’s governor, however, Andrew Cuomo, in June expressed concerns
about the confluence of protests and the virus. "If you were at a protest,
go get a test, please."
But last month, after New York City hired 1,000 workers to conduct contact
tracing to monitor the spread of coronavirus, de Blasio's office said they
would not be explicitly asking people if they participated in the Black
Lives Matter demonstrations. De Blasio's spokeswoman, at the time, said “no
person will be asked proactively if they attended a protest.”
Still, Cohen said this weekend that contact tracers were "not barred from
asking positive cases about attending protests," and that "when identifying
their close contacts, patients are asked if they attended any large
gatherings or events."
"We remain overcautious," Cohen said. "As we continue our phases reopening,
we will continue to monitor our indicators closely for any potential
resurgence."
By contrast, a spokesperson for Carlos A. Giménez, the mayor of Miami-Dade
County, told Fox News on Sunday the protests were a "contributing factor" to
the local coronavirus spike.
Giménez "meets several times a week with his team of medical experts," the
spokesperson, Patty Abril, responded in an email. "Those experts have told
him that, based on information in our local emergency rooms, the protests
were a contributing factor, along with our community letting its guard down
and not social distancing or wearing masks, as mandated. Graduation parties,
house parties and restaurants illegally turning into clubs after midnight
all contributed to the spike."
The mayor had announced a curfew last week after it was determined that
roughly 2,300 of Florida's 10,109 new coronavirus infections originated in
Miami-Dade.
“This curfew is meant to stop people from venturing out and hanging out
with friends in groups, which has shown to be spreading the virus rapidly,”
Giménez said in a statement.
Meanwhile, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan's office directed Fox News to city
health official James Apa, who downplayed the role of protests while still
acknowledging they may have played a role in some new cases.
"No single exposure site has been the primary driver for our increase in
cases," Apa said. "Top contributors include infections from other people in
households, essential workers being exposed on the job and infections within
long term care facilities. From what we can tell, protests were not a major
factor."
Pressed on whether protests could have contributed to the coronavirus
upswing, Apa indicated that any impact was probably marginal.
"A small percentage of the total number of cases reported going to a protest
, which may or may not mean they acquired it there," he said. "Protests are
not driving our upsurge in cases."
The mayors of Atlanta, Minneapolis, San Diego, Washington, D.C., Oakland,
San Francisco, Houston and New Orleans did not return Fox News' requests for
comment concerning the potential that protests might have led to an
increase in coronavirus cases.
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, who did not return Fox News' request for
comment as to whether he sees a connection between protests and the
coronavirus, had previously warned that in-person worship services would be
a "public-health disaster," disregarding constituents' concerns that he was
violating their First Amendment rights. In May, his administration began
distributing masks to rioters, even though public gatherings of 10 or more
were still ostensibly banned. Frey also allowed a police station to burn,
saying it was necessary to protect police and rioters.
Accused 'ringleader' of attack on Andrew Jackson statue arrestedVideo
The mayor of Washington D.C., Muriel Bowser, who also did not return Fox
News' inquiries on Sunday, vowed $5,000 fines or 90 days in jail for anyone
violating stay-at-home orders. Weeks later, though, Bowser defended the
protests: "We are grieving hundreds of years of institutional racism. ...
People are tired, sad, angry and desperate for change."
The mayor of Atlanta, Keisha Lance Bottoms, has been one of the few
politicians to attempt to keep up her coronavirus admonitions. "If you were
out protesting last night, you probably need to go get a COVID test this
week," she told CNN at the height of the protests. "There is still a
pandemic in America that’s killing Black and Brown people at higher numbers
."
The mayor didn't answer Fox News' questions on the spread of the coronavirus
, but she did deliver emotional remarks on Sunday after an 8-year-old girl
was shot and killed on the Fourth of July near a Wendy's that became a
flashpoint of recent anti-police protests in the city.
“Enough is enough," Bottoms said. "Enough is enough. We have talked about
this movement that's happening across America and this moment in time when
we have the ears and the interests of people across this country and across
this globe who are saying they want to see change. But the difference in
this moment in time with the civil rights movement -- the civil rights
movement, there was a defined, common enemy. We're fighting the enemy within
when we are shooting each other up on our streets."
She continued: "You shot and killed a baby. And there wasn’t just one
shooter; there were at least two shooters. An eight-year-old baby. If you
want people to take us seriously, and you don't want us to lose this
movement, then we can't lose each other."
"It has to stop," Bottoms added, according to FOX 5 Atlanta. "You can't
blame this on police officers. It's about people who shot a baby in a car.
We're doing each other more harm than any officer on this force."
An Atlanta police officer currently faces a potential death penalty sentence
for killing a black man who attempted to shoot the officer with his own
taser during a DUI stop; that officer's stepmother later spoke to Fox News
about why she was fired from her job as well.
i**********a
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splendor的脸都抽肿了
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相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: protests话题: new话题: fox话题: news