Tag Archives: months

Canada’s vaccine rollout stalls, confining seniors to their homes for months to come

But their patience, if not their sense of humor, is running thin. They say they still have no idea when they will get that all important “shot in the arm” and a shot at a normal life again.

“On the one hand you try to be reasonable, and then on the other you’re screaming your head off saying…you know, ‘what’s wrong here, why are we not doing something else,’ ya know?” said Carol as her husband David nodded in agreement from their home in Stouffville, Ontario, just outside of Toronto.

The Canadian government thought it could pay to play in the global race to vaccinate its way back to normal life. But as its vaccine supply slowed to a trickle in February, Canada remains on the sidelines of that race despite buying more vaccines doses per capita than, likely, any other country on Earth.

Canada did seemingly get an early start on buying vaccines in April last year, although the government says it could not convince any companies to produce them on Canadian soil. And ultimately it was the timeline — the fact that manufacturers did not prioritize Canada for doses this winter — that has sealed the fate of millions of Canadians still waiting to get a vaccine.

“We just haven’t heard anything about about what the near future holds for us other than the fact that we might see some supply coming into the country in April, and that’s a very frustrating thing for me,” David told CNN.

To date, Canadian officials say they have administered nearly 1.2 million doses, vaccinating less than 3% of its population — a fraction of the doses administered in the United States and the United Kingdom — and it is now falling behind most European countries as well.

By comparison, the US has vaccinated at least 10% of its population and the UK nearly 20%. Canadians have close ties to people in both countries, and many have started to hear from friends and family who have received a vaccine or have an appointment to get one.

As a retired nurse, Carol is all too aware that the new and highly transmissible variants are stalking seniors, and that the need for vaccines is growing ever more dire.

“It’s such an immense thing this pandemic and nobody’s ever had to do this before, and it’s just, just troubleshooting all the time, and I realize that from a logical standpoint,” Carol said. “But there is an emotional part of it and that’s hard — it’s really hard, because you’re second guessing yourself, you’re second-guessing other people in power and saying, ‘well how come they’re doing it better there and we’re not doing it better here and why aren’t we getting the vaccine?'”

Carol says that while they’re in relative good health, it’s becoming harder to accept that there is no precise timeline for when they will get their vaccine.

Where are Canada’s vaccines?

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is sticking to his promise: Every Canadian who wants a vaccine will get one by September.

To make good on that promise, Canada says it has purchased nearly 400 million doses from seven vaccine manufacturers. To date only the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines have been authorized for use in Canada.

While Canada says it has spent nearly a billion dollars to buy those vaccines, the country has not been at the front of the line in receiving those vaccines.

Both Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna have significantly slowed deliveries to Canada after a combination of manufacturing delays and demands from Europe, where Canada procures its doses, to restrict vaccine exports subject to European approval.

Canada did not attempt to procure any vaccine doses from the US after the Trump administration indicated it would not allow any vaccines to be exported.

“The turbulence week after week that we’re seeing is of concern and we’re watching it closely and we’re staying on it,” Trudeau said last week during a press conference. “But let me reassure people we are still very much on track as promised to get those six million doses by the end of March, because that’s what the vaccine CEO’s keep telling me, and I’m happy to reassure Canadians on that.”

For Canada, vaccines may be plentiful by spring but months late to help the vulnerable who are still sheltering and fearful of new virus variants.

“The bottom line is that every single delay is lives lost, and that’s the tragedy of it all,” said Jillian Kohler, a professor at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto and an adviser with the World Health Organization. “This is not something where we can just sit back and say, ‘oh we didn’t think this through’ or ‘we didn’t we know that manufacturing of vaccines is complex and delays do happen,’ but the reality is when we slow down (on vaccines) we have lives that are lost needlessly and that is unacceptable.”

With the few vaccines that have been delivered, Canada has prioritized long-term care centers, places where Covid-19 has taken a deadly toll.

The government has also mounted an impressive effort to vaccinate remote and indigenous communities where healthcare services are lacking. The government indicated this week that in some northern outposts, more than 90% of the adult population had already been vaccinated.

This may indeed save lives, but in the short-term it will not change lives for most Canadians.

Professor Kohler says that instead of “hoarding” vaccines, the Canadian government should have realized months ago that without any domestic manufacturing capability, it would be at the mercy of manufacturers and a fierce global competition for doses.

“Having vaccine sovereignty is critical. Relying on exports for critical health needs doesn’t frankly make sense when we’re looking at trends of nationalism,” she said.

Canada signed a tentative agreement with US vaccine firm Novavax to produce millions of doses of its Covid-19 vaccine candidate at a facility in Montreal. But that production likely won’t begin until late this year at the earliest.

The Greens say they’re reading all the headlines and understand the complexities, but they will miss their granddaughter’s 8th birthday this month, and they say “that hurts.”

“Yes, yeah absolutely, because I just feel like we’re really behind the hay wagon so to speak you know?” Carol said, adding that, just like the Christmas holidays, they will celebrate the birthday virtually.

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Gmail iOS App Has Out of Date Warning After 2 Months of No Updates as Google Delays Privacy Labels [Updated]

Though Google has promised to update its suite of apps with App Privacy labels to comply with App Store rules that Apple began enforcing in December, many of its major apps have gone months without an update and still list no privacy information.


It’s been so long since Google last updated the Gmail app, in fact, that Gmail now displays a warning that the latest security features are unavailable. As discovered by Techmeme editor Spencer Dailey, when you go to log into a new account in the Gmail app for iOS, it gives a warning that you should update and suggests that you only continue with the sign in “if you understand the risks.”

Unfortunately, there is no update available for the Gmail app. Version 6.0.201115 of the Gmail app is the only available version of Gmail on the iPhone and iPad, and it hasn’t been updated since December 1.

Google on January 5 claimed that it would be adding privacy data to its app catalog “this week or next week,” but by January 20, most apps still had not been updated with the App Privacy labels.

Google has since quietly been adding labels to apps like YouTube, but major apps like Gmail, Google Search, Google Photos, Google Maps, and others still do not have privacy details. Even in apps that have gained with labels, there have been no feature or security updates for the most part.

It continues to be unclear why Google is taking so long to add App Privacy labels to its iOS apps, and there’s no word yet on when Gmail will get an update. Google has been regularly updating its Android apps, and the last update for the Android Gmail app was released on February 9.

There has been speculation that Google is hesitant to provide the privacy label data because of the negative feedback that other companies like Facebook have received, but there’s still no confirmed explanation.

App Privacy labels have been required since iOS 14.3 and are designed to provide customers with details about what data an app collects from them so they can make an informed choice when opting to install an app. App developers are required to self-report privacy information in the ‌‌App Store‌‌, and developers must identify all data collection and use cases.

Update: Google has pushed a server side update that removes the out of date warning when attempting to sign into a new account in the Gmail app.



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WHO finds possible evidence of COVID-19 cases two months earlier than identified

An investigation by the World Health Organization in China on the origins of the coronavirus found that there might have been coronavirus cases in China two months earlier than originally identified. 

The four-week investigation showed there were over 90 people in central China who were hospitalized for coronavirus symptoms two months before Dec. 8, 2019, the day China says the first coronavirus patient was found, the Wall Street Journal reported

WHO wants China to test blood samples from a wider population from the fall of 2019 to confirm their theory, but Chinese authorities said they aren’t allowed to test them yet, WHO investigators told WSJ. 

China officials did do antibody testing on some of the 90 patients that were found to have coronavirus symptoms last fall, but there were no antibodies found in them. However, WHO investigators think they just waited too long to test them and the antibodies subsided, WSJ says.

It is unclear how long antibodies survive in the body for the coronavirus as there is debate on whether they last a couple of weeks or a couple of months. 

Blood samples and medical records have been checked, but there has been no evidence that the virus appeared before December of 2019, Liang Wannian, head of the coronavirus panel for China’s National Health Commission, said Tuesday,

More studies and blood samples will be required in order to determine if the coronavirus was around before December of 2019. 



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‘It’s almost like he slept through the whole pandemic’: Teen in coma for 10 months wakes up – WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland

  1. ‘It’s almost like he slept through the whole pandemic’: Teen in coma for 10 months wakes up WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland
  2. A British teenager fell into a 10-month coma before the pandemic. Now he’s waking up in a new world CNN
  3. Man wakes up from 11-month coma, as family weighs how to explain pandemic to him: report Fox News
  4. British Teen Emerging From 10-Month Coma With No Knowledge Of COVID-19 Pandemic HuffPost
  5. A British Teenager Coming Out of a 10-Month Coma Has No Idea There’s a Pandemic | RELEVANT RELEVANT Magazine
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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COVID-19 ‘long-hauler’ still struggling with symptoms months after diagnosis

A 29-year-old Omaha man said he’s still suffering from the side effects of COVID-19, three months after testing positive for the virus.Doctors call him a COVID-19 ‘long-hauler’ but there aren’t many answers on how to help him. He said after getting the virus, his life has never been the same.Painting is a passion for Jared Staben.”This is my favorite one,” he said, showing a painting.Creativity is his outlet, but COVID-19 crept in and took it away.”It’s so frustrating because I have all of these hobbies that I used to do beforehand, I’ve written a book, I paint, well, used to paint,” Staben said.“It’s very difficult now for me to focus long enough to be able to get more than a paragraph or half a canvas.”Staben tested positive in November, after a 103-degree fever.“The day after Thanksgiving, I had a fever of 103. Then loss of taste, loss of smell, it really felt like somebody had punched me right here in the face. All of my joints just felt like they were on fire,” he said.The 29-year-old said he had every symptom, but one refuses to go away months later.”Episodes of delirium, forgetting who I am, where I am. Instead of brain fog, it’s just like a waking delirium because one minute I’ll be fine and the next minute I start to zone out and it feels like I’m in a haze,” Staben said.Staben is what doctor’s call a “long-hauler.”He’s testing negative, but still struggling with the side effects of the virus.”There’s so much I don’t know, there’s so much the doctors don’t know and I’m just in limbo,” Staben said.Staben said last week he fell during an episode. Doctors thought it might be a seizure, so he got an MRI.”Thankfully there’s no sign of a stroke or anything but it doesn’t explain any of these other symptoms,” he said.“It has been very frustrating, there have been a couple times when I just feel lost, depressed.”Staben wants people to take the virus seriously and mask up.“I never thought this could happen. And I just wish that everybody would wake up. We’ve been dealing with this for a year now,” he said.“Wearing a mask is a sign of respect, and when you’re not it’s just incredibly disrespectful. Just wear a mask. that’s literally the least we can do at this point.”

A 29-year-old Omaha man said he’s still suffering from the side effects of COVID-19, three months after testing positive for the virus.

Doctors call him a COVID-19 ‘long-hauler’ but there aren’t many answers on how to help him. He said after getting the virus, his life has never been the same.

Painting is a passion for Jared Staben.

“This is my favorite one,” he said, showing a painting.

Creativity is his outlet, but COVID-19 crept in and took it away.

“It’s so frustrating because I have all of these hobbies that I used to do beforehand, I’ve written a book, I paint, well, used to paint,” Staben said.

“It’s very difficult now for me to focus long enough to be able to get more than a paragraph or half a canvas.”

Staben tested positive in November, after a 103-degree fever.

“The day after Thanksgiving, I had a fever of 103. Then loss of taste, loss of smell, it really felt like somebody had punched me right here in the face. All of my joints just felt like they were on fire,” he said.

The 29-year-old said he had every symptom, but one refuses to go away months later.

“Episodes of delirium, forgetting who I am, where I am. Instead of brain fog, it’s just like a waking delirium because one minute I’ll be fine and the next minute I start to zone out and it feels like I’m in a haze,” Staben said.

Staben is what doctor’s call a “long-hauler.”

He’s testing negative, but still struggling with the side effects of the virus.

“There’s so much I don’t know, there’s so much the doctors don’t know and I’m just in limbo,” Staben said.

Staben said last week he fell during an episode. Doctors thought it might be a seizure, so he got an MRI.

“Thankfully there’s no sign of a stroke or anything but it doesn’t explain any of these other symptoms,” he said.

“It has been very frustrating, there have been a couple times when I just feel lost, depressed.”

Staben wants people to take the virus seriously and mask up.

“I never thought this could happen. And I just wish that everybody would wake up. We’ve been dealing with this for a year now,” he said.

“Wearing a mask is a sign of respect, and when you’re not it’s just incredibly disrespectful. Just wear a mask. that’s literally the least we can do at this point.”

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US Coronavirus: Hospitalizations are the lowest they’ve been in nearly 2 months. But US is still in for ‘rough’ coming weeks, expert says

More than 97,000 patients remain hospitalized with the virus — a far cry from the country’s peak of more than 132,400 on January 6. The last time this number fell below 100,000 was December 1.

“Right now it’s the worst of possible worlds. It’s the winter. It’s getting cold out, people are together more, there’s still a critical number of people in the United States who don’t wear masks, who don’t social distance,” Dr. Paul Offit, a member of the FDA’s vaccine advisory committee, told CNN Saturday. “I think the next six weeks or two months are going to be rough. I think we could have another 100,000, 150,000 deaths.”

According to projections from the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, nearly 120,000 more Americans could lose their lives to the virus over the next two months.
A rapid variant spread could push that projection even higher. That’s why experts have urged doubling down on safety measures like masks and social distancing and called for accelerated vaccinations across the country.
On Saturday, Maryland became the second state to report a case of a Covid-19 variant first identified in South Africa. And officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say cases of another variant — first identified in the UK — have been detected in at least 30 states. Experts have said both strains appear to be more transmissible.

29.5 million doses administered

But there’s good reason for hope.

Two vaccines have already gotten the green light for the US market and more could be on their way.
More than 29.5 million vaccine doses have so far been administered nationwide, according to CDC data. About 5.2 million Americans have received both doses of a vaccine.

Hindered by weeks-long allocation and distribution problems, the numbers are lower than where experts once hoped the US would be by now. But health and state officials hope vaccinations will ramp up in the coming months.

In New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office said Saturday morning the state had administered 91% of the first vaccine doses it received from the federal government and urged for more supply.

“New York’s vast distribution network is capable of handling more than 100,000 vaccinations per day, but to actually do it, we need more doses from the federal government,” Cuomo said in a statement.

The governor previously announced the state will receive 16% more doses for the next three weeks. In his Saturday statement, Cuomo said that while the bump is a “welcome increase, the reality is that we simply need more supply.”

In Washington state, health officials announced more than 10,000 people had been vaccinated at the state’s mass vaccination sites with the help of the state’s National Guard and other partners.

“The goal of mass vaccination sites is to increase access to vaccine across the state, ensure our plans are equitable, and protect those most at risk,” a statement from Washington state’s health department said.

Transit authorities implement CDC guidance

Meanwhile, an order issued by the CDC requiring people to wear masks while using any form of public transportation in the US will go into effect Monday night.

The agency said public transportation operators must use best efforts to enforce the mandate, including only boarding those wearing masks and disembarking passengers who refuse to comply.

Transit authorities across several major US cities and states — including New York, New Jersey, Washington, DC, San Francisco, Chicago and Atlanta — told CNN they are already in compliance.

In Washington, DC, the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority told CNN “face coverings have been required on Metro since May.”

“We welcome any policy that further promotes compliance on Metro and in all public spaces to combat the spread of the virus, and welcome the ability of TSA and other federal authorities to enforce this mandate when appropriate,” a spokesperson said.

In California, a Bay Area Rapid Transit spokesperson said the Bay Area’s public transportation system has had a face covering mandate in place since April.

And in Atlanta, a spokesperson said the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority began requiring masks in July.

Trying to understand more about the virus

And now more than a year since the world first learned about the virus, a team of World Health Organization investigators examining the origins of the pandemic will head to a seafood wholesale market in Wuhan, China, on Sunday — the market that’s believed to be where the first Covid-19 infections were detected.

The team of experts were released from a two-week quarantine on Thursday, one member told CNN.

The investigation comes about a year after the Chinese city went into lockdown because of the pandemic, and there is skepticism about just how much the team of scientists will be able to uncover.
An earlier report by a WHO team in China, published in February 2020, found that “key knowledge gaps remain” about the virus, though it endorsed previous findings that the virus appeared to have originated in animals, with the likely first outbreak at the seafood market in Wuhan.

CNN’s Alta Spells, Sandi Sidhu, Lauren Mascarenhas, Laura Ly, Amanda Watts and Hollie Silverman contributed to this report.

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Airline pilots returning to the skies after months on lockdown are making ‘mistakes’

Dozens of US airline pilots have reported making ‘mistakes’ because they are ‘rusty’ after returning to the skies following months of lockdown due to the pandemic, a NASA watchdog has reported.

Air travel has been at its lowest demand in decades as a result of COVID-19, which shut down many international flights as countries tried to curb the virus. 

Now pilots getting back into the captain’s seat have told ‘s NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System that since May they have been making dozens of ‘mistakes’ because they are out of practice. 

Errors include forgetting to disengage the parking break on take off, taking three attempts to land the plane on a windy day, choosing the wrong runway and forgetting to turn on the anti-icing mechanism that prevents the altitude and airspeed sensors from freezing.

So far, there have been no reported incidents of out-of-practice pilots causing accidents that have injured passengers.

Whilst aviation experts say they are confident in the safety of flights they warn of the need for pilots returning to work after months away to receive extra training sessions, with some US airlines starting to provide it.    

Dozens of pilots have told NASA’s anonymous Aviation Safety Reporting System that they have made ‘mistakes’ due to being ‘rusty’ as a result of fewer flights during the pandemic. Pictured is a Boeing 767-323 cargo jet takes off from Los Angeles international Airport on January 13, 2021. It’s not clear which airlines the pilots flew for

Aviation experts say they are confident in the skills of pilots and the airlines providing them extra training after months in lockdown 

One officer, who did not turn his de-icing system on, told the NASA watchdog: ‘Because I had not flown in a few months, I was rusty. I felt that my recollection was strong enough, but in reality I should have taken some time to review’ the standard operating procedures, as reported by The Los Angeles Times.    

Another pilot accidentally lined up to land on the wrong runway, while a different pilot accidentally disengaged autopilot and a first officer made an unusually steep turn after misreading instruments in the cockpit.  

In each case, the pilots and first officers blamed the errors on being out of practice.

In September, a first officer on a commercial jet reported having misjudged the distance to the runway during a landing and causing the plane to descend too low. Instead of aborting the landing and circling the airport for another try — the safest option — the first officer made last-minute adjustments to land.

‘Contributing factors included light turbulence requiring constant power adjustments,’ the first officer said.

They added: ‘Also, lack of recent flight time due to taking leave — this was my first approach/landing in a number of weeks on top of very limited flight time in the past six months.’

During an incident in October when a pilot forgot to take off the parking break they said it had been ’40 days since my last flight.’

They added: ‘We are flying less, so we need to be even more attentive. Better attention to detail.’ 

NASA’s Aviation Safety Reporting System was developed so that pilots and other airline crew members could anonymously report mechanical glitches and human errors without fear of reprisal from airplane manufacturers or airline management.   

International and domestic flights plummeted, and in the case of some destinations, ceased completely last year. Leading many pilots to feel out of practice once they got back in the air. Pictured is a JetBlue Airways Airbus A320-232 taking off from Los Angeles international Airport on January 13, 2021

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) bars pilots from flying a commercial jet unless they have performed three takeoffs and three landings — either on a plane or in a simulator — in the previous 90 days

Airline experts have long acknowledged that when pilots are inactive for long periods their skills decline quickly and they are prone to making errors, like flying too fast or too high during a landing or forgetting to get clearance from the air traffic control tower before descending to a lower altitude.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) bars pilots from flying a commercial jet unless they have performed three takeoffs and three landings- either on a plane or simulator- in the last 90-days. 

But the FAA amended that requirement twice last year, giving pilots more leeway, though so far no US airline has reported a pilot needing to use it.   

In April and May, the number of daily takeoffs in the US dropped to about 75% below pre-pandemic levels.

In recent months, the number of takeoffs has risen to 43% below pre-pandemic times, according to industry data.

As a result, some pilots have been brought back to work after being away for up to four months.

Last week Delta Air Lines announced that it planned to bring back about 400 pilots by summer in hopes that the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines will boost demand for travel. 

Aviation experts say there are enough backup systems in modern passenger jets to prevent minor oversights from becoming serious accidents.

Richard G. McSpadden Jr, senior vice president at the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association’s Air Safety Institute, said: ‘The key to flying safely is frequency. You are not as sharp if you haven’t flown for a while.’  

However, the International Air Transport Association, a trade group for the world’s airlines, reported a steep increase last spring in the rate of planes making ‘unstable approaches’, which typically occur when pilots try to land at too high a speed or without enough thrust and have to make last-minute adjustments.

The airlines group reported that the rate of ‘unstable approaches’ jumped from about 13 or 14 for every 1,000 flights before the pandemic to more than 35 per 1,000 in May.

The problem of unstable approaches increased in airports around the world in the spring and summer of 2020, the group said, but the rate returned to pre-pandemic levels in the last few months.   

But many experts say they are not concerned. Kenneth P. Byrnes, chairman of the Flight Training Department at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, said that commercial passenger jets always fly with a pilot and a co-pilot to reduce the odds of pilot error.

He said: ‘I’m comfortable with the safety requirements. I don’t think there is an imminent danger.’  

Mark Searle, global director for safety at the International Air Transport Association, said he has faith that pilots are on top of their need to do more training. 

‘If they adhere to standard operation procedures that we practice, I don’t think there is much of an issue,’ he said.  

The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association recently offered a video series on its website to help out-of-practice pilots sharpen their flying skills.

The series includes tutorials on using the radio to communicate with an air traffic control tower and tips on making a smoother landing.

American Airlines, one of the world’s largest carriers, was also worried about pilots being out of practice, so it began more frequent reviews of its data on pilot performance.

The pilot data from 2020 showed no loss in proficiency, said Kimball Stone, American Airlines’ senior vice president of flight operations.

‘There has been no degradation of skills,’ he said.  

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Lindsey Graham Warns Not to Allow ‘QAnon Shaman’ Impeachment Testimony, Says Trial Could ‘Go For Months’

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) has warned against allowing “QAnon Shaman” Jacob Chansley to testify at former President Donald Trump’s unprecedented second impeachment trial.

Chansley, also known as Jake Angeli, is facing multiple charges for his participation in the insurrection that the article of impeachment alleges the former president incited on January 6. Although Graham denounced the House for impeaching Trump on January 13 without calling any witnesses, on Friday the senator said that allowing witnesses at the Senate trial could lead to a lengthy “circus” featuring testimony from the likes of Chansley.

“I cannot think of a better way to turn the upcoming impeachment trial into a complete circus than to call the QAnon Shaman as a witness on anything,” Graham tweeted. “The House impeached President Trump without a witness. If we open the witness door in the Senate there will be lots of witnesses requested on a variety of topics. And the trial will go for months, not days.”

Chansley was the subject of photos that quickly went viral after the Capitol was violently breached by pro-Trump rioters. The shirtless “shaman” was pictured wearing a memorable outfit that included a furry horned hat and patriotic face paint.

Although Chansley had been a devoted follower of Trump and is closely associated with the elaborate and false pro-Trump QAnon conspiracy theory, he has reversed course since being arrested and now says he is willing to testify against the former president.

“QAnon Shaman” Jacob Chansley is pictured at a “Stop the Steal” rally for former President Donald Trump held shortly before the U.S. Capitol was violently breached in Washington, D.C. on January 6, 2021.
Robert Nickelsberg/Getty

Albert Watkins, Chansley’s defense attorney, said that his client has come to believe that he was “made the fool” by Trump during a Friday phone interview with Newsweek, while insisting that an impeachment trial without Chansley would be more like a “circus” than one with him.

“He has come to the conclusion and been made acutely aware of the fact that what has happened is instead of being the patriot who’s trying to help his president save his country, he was made the fool,” said Watkins. “If there’s going to be something more than a circus proceeding with clowns doing backflips during the impeachment proceedings, you have to have someone who was incited testify.”

Prior to Trump’s exit from the White House on January 20, Watkins urged the former president to issue a full pardon to Chansley and others who had been “peaceful and compliant” during the riots, which he said happened at the “invitation of a president.”

The violent breach, featuring rioters who indicated that they believed Trump’s false claims of massive election fraud as Congress met to certify President Joe Biden’s Electoral College win, resulted in the deaths of five people. Chansley is not accused of being directly responsible for any of the deaths.

Newsweek reached out to Graham’s office for comment.

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New Zealand reports 1st community case in months

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — New Zealand has reported its first coronavirus case outside of a quarantine facility in more than two months, although there was no immediate evidence the virus was spreading in the community.

Director-General of Health Ashley Bloomfield said Sunday the case was a 56-year-old woman who recently returned from Europe.

Like other returning travelers, she spent 14 days in quarantine and twice tested negative before being returning home on Jan. 13. She later developed symptoms and tested positive.

He said health officials will conduct genome testing but are working under the assumption that the case is a more transmissible variant of the virus.

He said they are investigating to see whether its possible she caught the disease from another returning traveler who was staying in the same quarantine facility.

New Zealand has eliminated community transmission of the virus, at least for now. Bloomfield said officials are ramping up contact tracing and testing efforts and hope to have more information about the case in the coming days.

Elsewhere in the Asia-Pacific region:

— A Chinese city has completed 2,600 temporary treatment rooms as the country’s north battles new clusters of the coronavirus. The single-occupancy rooms in the city of Nangong in Hebei province just outside Beijing are each equipped with their own heaters, toilets, showers and other amenities, the official Xinhua News Agency reported. Special attention has been paid to Hebei because of its proximity to the capital and the province has locked down large areas to prevent further spread of the virus. The provincial capital Shijiazhung and the city of Xingtai, which encompasses Nangong, have been largely sealed off. Community isolation and large-scale testing have also been enforced. The National Health Commission on Sunday reported 19 additional cases in Hebei. The far northeastern province of Heilongjiang reported another 29 cases, linked partly to an outbreak at a meat processing plant. Beijing, where around 2 million residents have been ordered to undergo new testing, reported two new confirmed cases. China currently has 1,800 people being treated for COVID-19, 94 of them listed in serious condition, with another 1,017 being monitored in isolation for having tested positive for the virus without displaying symptoms.

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Follow all of AP’s pandemic coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic, https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-vaccine and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

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Kristin Cavallari, Jay Cutler pose for photo together months after announcing split: ’10 years’

Kristin Cavallari and Jay Cutler are keeping things friendly.

The famous pair announced in April 2020 that they had decided to go their separate ways after “10 years together.”

Now, nearly nine months after the announcement, Cavallari, 34, and Cutler, 37, are proving they can still be pals.

The two both took to Instagram on Friday night to share identical posts.

KRISTIN CAVALLARI IS ‘BACK’ TO HER ‘OLD SELF’ AMID JAY CUTLER DIVORCE: ‘IT FEELS REALLY DAMN GOOD’

In the pic, the former reality star cuddled up to the former NFL quarterback as they both wore small smirks.

“The world is full of users,” read their shared caption. “10 years. Can’t break that.”

Jay Cutler and Kristin Cavallari posed for a photo together almost nine months after announcing their split. (Getty Images)

The posts had followers wondering whether the cozy pic had a larger meaning.

“Are you guys not DUNZO?!” asked a follower.

“Alright sister break it down so you’re back on?” wrote another. “Bye bye comedian?”

A third added: “So we’re married or….”

Others felt that there wasn’t much subtext to the post, but rather that it served as a signifier of their ability to still work together.

KRISTIN CAVALLARI TALKS EXES AFTER THANKSGIVING, JAY CUTLER SPENDS HOLIDAY WITH CARRIE UNDERWOOD

“I think he’s saying they’re a team forever – after 10 years together and 3 kids,” one Instagram user wrote. “Not that they’re back together romantically.”

“Calm people,” urged another. “They are being great parents.”

Yet another echoed: “It means they are going to co-parent like rockstars…doubt they are back together. (…but secretly hopeful?)”

Others seemed confused altogether.

The “Very Cavallari” stars share three children together: Camden, 8, Jaxon, 6, and Saylor, 5. (Getty Images)

“And you get the award for most confusing caption,” a fan commented.

“Gotta crack this code,” wrote another.

Reps for the pair did not immediately respond to Fox News’ request for comment.

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The “Laguna Beach” alum has been very open about her experience with divorce and revealed last year that she considered splitting from the athlete “every single day for over two years.”

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Various rumors of relationships have swirled over the last few months, with the star having been spotted giving a smooch to comedian Jeff Dye, and later had to shut down rumors of a relationship between herself and “Southern Charm” actor Austen Kroll.

The “Very Cavallari” stars share three children together: Camden, 8, Jaxon, 6, and Saylor, 5



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