China-based voice-recognition technology firm iFlytek Co. (002230.SZ)
Monday said it has applied to the U.S. Department of Commerce seeking
an exemption from a ban to purchase medical supplies to stem the
coronavirus outbreak in China.
iFlytek was among several Chinese tech companies put on a U.S.
blacklist last year which bans American suppliers from exporting
U.S.-origin technology to them without a license.
iFlytek also said the U.S. ban has caused no significant impact on
its operations as it has shifted to Chinese suppliers after being
blacklisted by the U.S. https://www.marketscreener.com/IFLYTEK-CO-LTD-6500190/news/Iflytek-China-s-iFlytek-Seeks-Exemption-From-U-S-Ban-to-Buy-Medical-Supplies-29968029/
Five Wuhan university dorms were converted into quarantine centers for coronavirus patients as the city struggles to contain the disease.
Over the weekend, major cities such as Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and
Tianjin have joined a list of over 80 Chinese cities that have enacted
isolation measures to prevent the virus from spreading.
University Dorms
On Feb. 7, Hu Yabo, vice mayor of Wuhan City, where the virus first broke out, said
at a daily press conference that the city and provincial governments
would convert student dorms at four universities and the new campus of
the Hubei Province Communist Party training school, all located in
Wuhan.
In total, these colleges would supply 5,400 patient beds to quarantine coronavirus patients with mild symptoms.
Hu also said the city needs medical supplies desperately, including
41,400 protective suits, 56,800 N95 masks, and 19,200 goggles.
Netizens who said they were students at those universities began sharing photos
on social media, where workers can be seen pulling plastic tarp over
students’ beds and throwing students’ belongings onto the floor.
Students from Hanjiang University complained on social media that
they were not notified by the school that their dorms were going to be
converted into a quarantine center.
At 8:41 a.m. Feb. 8, the school announced the news on its official social media account. Many students commented under the post, complaining about the decision.
“Why use our dorm? Why don’t you use the stadium instead?,” said one
user. “Who can protect my belongings?,” another questioned. “How will
you disinfect our dorm before the new semester starts?,” another
worried. A worker produces protective face masks at a factory in Qingdao, China on Feb. 6, 2020. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)
Isolation
Netizens have also shared
videos of conflicts between residents and security personnel, as many
Chinese in cities held under lockdown begin to feel frustrated that they
cannot move around freely.
More than 80 Chinese city governments have launched some form of quarantine measures.
The most strict one is in Huanggang
City, also located in Hubei Province. It shut down all public
transportation and private vehicles’ travel on roads. It also mandated
that only one person from each family household can go outdoors to shop
for basic necessities. In addition, that designated person can only go
out once every two days.
The most common rule issued by governments
is to close down residential areas and villages, but leave an emergency
passageway for residents to enter and leave the premises. The
passageway is guarded by security personnel; anyone who leaves or enters
the area must fill out a form and have their body temperatures scanned.
On Feb. 5 and 6, the northeastern province of Liaoning and Jiangxi Province in the east announced
that both locales will be quarantined—meaning residents will not be
allowed to attend social gatherings. In addition, only one person per
household can go outdoors, once every two days.
Quickly Spreading
Tianjin, one of the four directly-governed municipalities in China, issued isolation measures on Feb. 6, after a 66 year-old woman who shopped at a local department store died from the coronavirus.
Mao Jinsong, director of the Baodi district government in Tianjin, said
at a Feb. 7 press conference that 23 residents in the district have
been diagnosed or suspected to be coronavirus patients. They all visited
the same department store.
Mao added that roughly 9,200 people visited the store between Jan. 19
and Jan. 25, when the woman had visited. All 194 store staff are now
being isolated at a quarantine center, while the 9,200 store patrons
will be required to self-isolate at home.
In Jinjiang City of Fujian Province, more than 4,000 people are under
quarantine after they came into contact with an infected person.
According to Chinese state-run media, a man returned home to Fujian on Jan. 20 after visiting Wuhan, but lied and said he had come back from the Philippines. He attended several parties afterwards.
On Jan. 23, the man started to feel sick. He was diagnosed with the
coronavirus on Jan. 27. Seven people who had contact with him were also
diagnosed.
The son of a former top Chinese official told
the Chinese-language Epoch Times on Feb. 5 that some family members of
senior Party officials have been infected with the coronavirus and are
receiving treatment at the China-Japan Friendship Hospital in Beijing.
The 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCov) first broke out in Wuhan in
early December 2019. Tens of thousands have been infected within China,
while dozens of countries are also reporting cases. https://www.theepochtimes.com/more-than-80-chinese-cities-under-quarantine-due-to-coronavirus-as-wuhan-converts-school-dorms-into-isolation-centers_3231532.html
President Donald Trump is expected to release a $4.8 trillion budget
Monday that charts a path for the start of a potential second term,
proposing steep cuts to social-safety-net programs and foreign aid and
higher outlays for defense and veterans.
The plan would increase military spending 0.3%, to $740.5 billion for
fiscal year 2021, which begins Oct. 1, according to a senior
administration official. The proposal would cut nondefense spending by
5%, to $590 billion, below the level Congress and the president agreed
to in a two-year budget deal last summer.
A White House budget reflects an administration’s priorities and
represents the opening bid in spending negotiations for the next fiscal
year. The new budget is unlikely to become law, however, as Democrats
control the House and spending bills in the GOP-led Senate need
bipartisan support.
The White House proposes to cut spending by $4.4 trillion over a
decade. Of that, it targets $2 trillion in savings from mandatory
spending programs, including $130 billion from changes to Medicare
prescription-drug pricing, $292 billion from safety-net cuts — such as
work requirements for Medicaid and food stamps — and $70 billion from
tightening eligibility access to federal disability benefits. https://www.marketwatch.com/story/trumps-proposed-48-trillion-budget-will-seek-cuts-to-medicare-medicaid-2020-02-09?siteid=rss&rss=1
Shortly after Zero Hedge asked in the last week of January if
the nVoC-2019 Coronavirus pandemic was not, as some early reports
claimed, the product of a Wuhan seafood market, where people were
allegedly eating infected bats (which we now know never happened) but instead a Chinese biological weapon that had escaped from the Wuhan Institute of Virology (and one lab in particular),
which in turn led to an immediate and permanent suspension of our
account by the publisher also known as Twitter (and which should thus be
subject to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act), none other than Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton echoed our concerns, tweeting that
“China claimed—for almost two months—that coronavirus had originated in
a Wuhan seafood market. That is not the case. @TheLancet published a
study demonstrating that of the original 40 cases, 14 of them had no
contact with the seafood market, including Patient Zero.”
Senator Cotton followed up this tweet with another, in which he
effectively suggested that the coronavirus had in fact escaped from
China’s only level four biohazard superlab (located conveniently in
Wuhan), stating that “we still don’t know where coronavirus originated.
Could have been a market, a farm, a food processing company. I would
note that Wuhan has China’s only biosafety level-four super laboratory
that works with the world’s most deadly pathogens to include, yes,
coronavirus.”
Tom Cotton@SenTomCotton
We still don’t know where coronavirus originated. Could have been a market, a farm, a food processing company.
I would note that Wuhan has China’s only biosafety level-four super
laboratory that works with the world’s most deadly pathogens to include,
yes, coronavirus.
And despite China’s best efforts to downplay this scary possibility
with countless articles written in China’s state-owned press
“disproving” that the virus was in fact an escaped Chinese bioweapon,
such as this one from Caixin “Shi Zhengli responds to questioning experts agree that the new crown virus is not artificial“,
while censoring any allegation across its social medias that the Wuhan
Institute was the origin of the virus, last Friday the White House
finally stepped in and with more than a month’s delay, and one week
after Cotton’s controversial tweet, the Trump administration formally asked scientists if
the virus was indeed a Chinese man-made bioweapon (needless to say, an
affirmative answer would put whoever it is at twitter that suspended our
account in a rather unpleasant position).
That did not prevent China from theatrically getting increasingly
more angry at the mere suggestion that the virus which some claim has
now infected over 1.5 million people, was a product of the Wuhan
Institute of Virology – as if by simply feigning outrage it could
convince the world’s population that it had nothing to do in the spread
of nCoV despite clear and glaring evidence to the contrary
– and on Sunday, the Chinese Ambassador to the U.S. Cui Tiankai slammed
Senator Cotton for doing just what we did first, namely suggesting the
coronavirus could have been created in a Chinese biological warfare lab.
“I think it’s true that a lot is still unknown and our scientists,
Chinese scientists, American scientists, scientists of other countries, are
doing their best to learn more about the virus, but it’s very harmful,
it’s very dangerous, to stir up suspicion, rumors and spread them among
the people,” he said.
It wasn’t clear if the “suspicion” would be more dangerous than the consequences of arresting your own Wuhan whistleblower doctor who tried to warn the world of the imminent danger from the Coronavirus (and who later died after a brief and unsuccessful battle with the virus)? Or maybe it was more dangerous than urging the world to ignore the fact that China has put 400 million of its own in people in over 60 cities on lockdown, and
continue flying commercial to China, pretending nothing is happening
and ignoring video clips from Wuhan showing local crematoria working
24/7 to dispose of bodies killed by the viral pandemic (without being
add to the list of diseases casualties).
Face The Nation@FaceTheNation
NEW: @AmbCuiTiankai dismisses #coronavirus conspiracy theories pushed by @SenTomCotton that it’s being used as biological warfare as “absolutely crazy.” WATCH –>
No, you see, what Tiankai was concerned about is that the possibility
that China created a plague that is now killing its own population,
could cause a panic: “For one thing, this will create panic,” Cui said, adding that it would also “fan up racial discrimination and xenophobia.”
Here one also wonders what will create a bigger panic: the fact that
China is arresting “whistleblower doctors”, drags away and sequesters
anyone who refuses to be put under forced quarantine, and appears to
fabricate data involving the epidemic, or cracks down on anyone asking
the most reasonable question – did China’s top bioweapon institute, located in Wuhan, spark the deadliest pandemic in decades, which started in… Wuhan?
But yes, we are delighted to see that China has now also stooped to using the oldest trick in the liberal playbook: “…but it’s racist.”
And just like that, anyone accusing China’s Level-4 lab, which as Nature wrote in 2017 was studying the “world’s most dangerous pathogens”, of sparking what may be the world’s worst pandemic in decades, is now a racist, and subject to immediate and permanent suspension by the free speech overlords at twitter such as the company’s associate General Counsel, Jeff Rich (his LinkedIn page is here) who one week ago urged his 1,400 followers to “cull” and “excise” the “cancerous” president Trump from the herd. One wonders, Rich, does this violate Twitter’s “Abuse and harassment” rules?
Jeff Rich@jeffrich
YES!! Again, this
Excise the Trump cancer, then deliberate over policy differences. He is
the single most destructive force against our system of government, way
of life and American values EVER! He must be culled from the herd.
ASAP! https://twitter.com/DevinCow/status/1223469280471265280 …
Devin Nunes’ cow @DevinCow
I’d like to
avoid another four years of Trump, for starters. We have 276 days. We
need to get people registered, choose two candidates who can beat Trump,
and get them elected on Nov. 3rd. Come Thanksgiving we can fight with
each other. Not now. https://twitter.com/Whispers_Doom/status/1223468340506779649 …
Anyway, back to China’s rather sensitive ambassador who, instead of
promising to look into whether any of the allegations that China created
the Coronavirus, simply lashed out at anyone daring to ask the
question: “There are all kinds of speculation and rumors,” he added,
noting that there were also conspiracy theories about the virus
originating in the United States. “How can we believe all these crazy things?”
Well, Cui, “we can believe all these crazy things”, because China has
yet to reveal just what animal was responsible for the spread of the
virus at the Huanan Seafood Market, as per the official Chinese
narrative. Maybe the reason why it can’t is that as scientists have already observed, no animal was capable of actually spreading the virus in such a way as to put the blame on a meat market that had existed for decades and never sparked a deadly pandemic.
Or maybe China can finally allow members of the US CDC to go
to Wuhan and inspect the Virology Institute and observe just what went
on in there, and whether, as so many have now speculated, it wasn’t one
of your public workers who accidentally (or not) spread the virus?
But that wasn’t all: Cui also defended how the Chinese government
handled the case of Li Wenliang, the Chinese doctor who died last week
after warning about the virus weeks before the government, with the government arresting him and forcing him to retract his warnings.
“He was a doctor, and a doctor could be alarmed by some individual
cases, but as for the government, you have to base your decisions on
more solid evidence and signs,” Cui said. “I don’t know who
tried to silence him, but there was certainly disagreement…on what
exactly the virus, is how it is affecting people.”
Face The Nation@FaceTheNation
“I don’t know
who tried to silence him, but there was certainly disagreement…on what
exactly the virus, is how it is affecting people,” @AmbCuiTiankai says in the wake of the death of Dr. Li Wenliang who first made public warnings of the #Coronavirus weeks before the government
Here is a guess who “tried to silence” him – your
government, the same government that was responsible for the
disappearance of Chen Qiushi, a citizen journalist who has covered the
outbreak in China and has since vanished. Asked about Cui responded “I have never heard of this guy, so I don’t have any information to share with you.”
Right.
We’ll conclude with what we said earlier today,
namely that “there have been serious questions on whether this Wuhan
coronavirus outbreak was due to a leak or mishandling of laboratory
animals used in coronavirus studies. This is a reasonable public
inquiry regarding the source of the outbreak and it warrants a
transparent investigation from the Chinese authorities and foreign
disease control and laboratory operation experts. This is not just about the accountability of medical ethics or laboratory safety operations, it is directly related to the current endeavors to contain the virus outbreak.
While the animal host of 2019-nCoV is yet to be
identified, the data and information from possible animal hosts and
potential zoonic infection is imperative for prevention and controlling
disease on an international scale.
The Huanan seafood market has a high potential of harboring the
animal host. Animal data and profiling results from the Huanan seafood
market need to be disclosed immediately by Chinese authorities even if
they are negative results. It is imperative for U.S. CDC and WHO
officers to demand that Chinese authorities release the information
about animal testing data. If Chinese authorities refuse to disclose testing data for
animal samples, it could imply an intentional cover-up of the true
origin of the 2019-nCoV outbreak.
Local Chinese authorities have not blocked Apple
supplier Foxconn from resuming production amid a coronavirus outbreak,
they said in a statement on Sunday, denying an earlier report in the
Nikkei Business Daily.
The Nikkei, citing four people familiar with the matter, said https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Coronavirus-outbreak/China-blocks-restart-of-Foxconn-plants-due-to-coronavirus-sources
on Saturday that public health experts had carried out inspections at
Foxconn’s factories and told the company that there was a “high risk of
coronavirus infection” at the facilities, making them unsuitable for a
production restart.
Shenzhen’s Longhua district, where Foxconn’s largest factory is
located, said in a statement on its official WeChat account on Sunday
that those reports were untrue and that it was still conducting checks,
adding that the company would restart production once inspections were
completed.
It said it had received proposals from three Foxconn subsidiaries on
Feb. 6 detailing how the Taipei-headquartered firm, which makes
smartphones for Apple and other brands, planned to put in place epidemic
prevention and control measures.
The thousands of workers that work in Foxconn’s factories will need
to wear masks, undergo temperature checks, and adhere to a dining system
considered safe, it said in the statement.
“We will announce to the public the company’s production resumption situation in a timely manner,” it added.
A source familiar with the matter told Reuters that tens of thousands
of workers had already returned from an extended new year holiday and
were waiting to start work on Feb. 10, even though plants in Zhengzhou,
Shenzhen and Kunshan had not received the go ahead to resume production.
Foxconn on Saturday said in an e-mailed statement to Reuters that
operation schedules for its facilities in China would follow the
recommendations of local governments, but declined to comment on
specific production facilities.
“We have not received any requests from our customers on the need to
resume production earlier (than the local governments’
recommendations),” it said.
The Chinese economy will sputter towards normal on Monday after the
coronavirus outbreak forced authorities in much of the country to extend
the week-long Lunar New Year holiday by 10 days amid mounting alarm
over an epidemic that by Sunday had killed over 800 people.
Foxconn could see a “big” production impact and shipments to
customers including Apple face disruption if the Chinese factory halt
extends into a second week, a person with direct knowledge of the matter
told Reuters earlier this week.
Several states have resurrected the most-hated part of Obamacare—the individual mandate.
Residents of California, Rhode Island, and Vermont must secure health insurance or pay a fine as of the beginning of this year. New Jersey and the District of Columbia implemented their mandates in January 2019. And Massachusetts’s state-level mandate has been in force since 2006.
These mandates will fail to bring about universal coverage, just as
Obamacare’s individual mandate failed to do so while it was in effect.
If states want to work toward universal coverage, they must make
insurance more affordable.
Obamacare’s individual mandate went into force in 2014.
Those who chose not to buy coverage that year faced fines of $95 for
each adult or 1% of household income, whichever was greater. By 2017, the penalty was the greater of $695 for each adult or 2.5% of household income.
The idea was to pressure young, healthy people that might normally
forego insurance into buying a plan. Premiums from these low-risk
customers were supposed to hold premiums for older customers more likely
to need costly care in check.
The individual mandate was, unsurprisingly, enormously unpopular. Six in ten Americans
had an unfavorable view of it from essentially the moment it was
enshrined into law, according to polling from the Kaiser Family
Foundation. The public saw it as an unprecedented intrusion into their
personal lives. Never before had the federal government forced private
citizens to purchase a particular good.
That public pushback fueled a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the mandate. The mandate survived, thanks to a neat bit of legal jiu-jitsu
from U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts. He declared that
the mandate wasn’t actually a requirement to purchase a private good; it
was a tax on those who went without insurance. No one questions
Congress’s power to tax, so the mandate could stand.
That is, until Republicans took back Congress and the presidency. As part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, Congress reduced the penalty for running afoul of the individual mandate to zero in 2019.
That move prompted a lawsuit from 20 states challenging the
constitutionality of the entirety of Obamacare. The plaintiffs argue
that the zeroed-out mandate is no longer a tax, so the constitutional
raison d’être for the law no longer applies. The U.S. Court of Appeals
for the 5th Circuit agreed—and has remanded the case back to U.S. District Court for further adjudication.
But set aside the toxic politics of the mandate. Judged by its own logic, the individual mandate was a miserable failure.
It did not drive people to buy insurance. In 2015, about 6.7 million people paid the penalty for non-compliance. About 29 million people overall went without coverage that year, in spite of the mandate. According to the most recent Census data, 8.9% of the U.S. population remains uninsured.
A big reason why? Obamacare’s many rules and regulations have driven up plan prices dramatically.
For example, Obamacare required all plans to cover a long list of benefits,
including maternity care, mental health care, and substance abuse
treatment. These services certainly have merit. But mandating coverage
of them drives up premiums.
Despite President Obama’s grand promise to “bend the cost curve” down, premiums in the state-level marketplaces actually more than doubled between 2013 and 2017. Benchmark mid-level “silver” plans in 2018 featured average annual premiums of almost $5,800 and deductibles of over $3,900.
The individual mandate offered many working families a tough
choice—pay for pricey insurance or get hit with a penalty. That penalty
was frequently the less expensive option.
The mandate also hit low-income and working-class Americans
especially hard. More than one-third of those who paid the mandate
penalty in 2015 had incomes below $25,000. And those with annual incomes between $25,000 and $50,000 accounted for the biggest share of people who paid the penalty that year.
Americans are hungry for low-cost insurance. Fortunately, the Trump
administration has made some moves to expand access to low-cost
coverage, most notably by relaxing the rules governing short-term,
limited-duration health plans.
The Obama administration set the maximum duration for these plans at
three months. The Trump administration raised that maximum term to 364
days—and allowed insurers to renew consumers’ short-term policies for up
to three years.
Short-term plans are exempt from Obamacare’s many cost-inflating
mandates, so they’re much cheaper than the policies for sale on the
exchanges—about 80% cheaper,
on average, according to an analysis conducted last year by eHealth.
That’s among the reasons federal officials predicted that about 600,000 people would enroll in short-term plans in 2019.
Short-term plans have their enemies. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has called them “disastrous junk plans.”
Twenty-one states have imposed restrictions on the plans that are more
stringent than the federal government’s. In 11 states, no short-term plans are available at all,
whether because they’re banned outright or because the regulatory
environment is so unfriendly that no insurers are willing to enter the
market.
Market forces are the most effective way to expand access to
affordable coverage—not mandates. Several of our nation’s bluest states
are poised to learn that lesson the hard way. https://www.forbes.com/sites/sallypipes/2020/02/03/states-should-not-resurrect-the-individual-mandate/#58ea3b206ced