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Tuesday, March 7, 2023

Nate Silver blasts ‘crazy’ COVID lockdowns that closed churches, kept museums open

 Nate Silver blasted COVID-era closures of churches while other public spaces, such as museums, were permitted to operate with fewer restrictions.

“It’s kind of crazy (and tells you a lot about who was writing the restrictions) that churches in some jurisdictions were subject to more restrictions than museums!” Silver, the data journalist and founder of the FiveThirtyEight statistical analysis news site, tweeted.

“Not even attempting to follow any sort of epidemiological principles.”

Silver was reacting on Tuesday to a blog post by journalist David Zweig, who wrote that a church and its members in Santa Clara County, Calif., were “the targets of an unprecedented surveillance operation” after they “defied” COVID restrictions.

In May 2020, the Calvary Chapel in San Jose and its pastor, Mike McClure, “brazenly defied” a shelter-in-place order imposed by public health officials in the county, Zweig wrote.

Nate Silver, the founder of FiveThirtyEight, slammed COVID restrictions on churches.
Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

Sara Cody, the head of the county public health department, announced in the fall of 2020 that churches were allowed “the lesser of 100 people or twenty-five percent capacity” while museums “could run at fifty percent,” according to Zweig.

Stores “had no capacity limits placed on them at all” in Santa Clara County, according to Zweig.

McClure’s church “began holding indoor gatherings, often with hundreds of worshippers, a large portion of whom were without masks, in breach of distancing rules, and singing,” Zweig wrote.

Silver was reacting to a story about Calvary Chapel of San Jose, which was allegedly the subject of an "unprecedented surveillance operation" by Santa Clara County authorities.
Silver reacted to a story about Calvary Chapel of San Jose, which was allegedly the subject of an “unprecedented surveillance operation” by Santa Clara County authorities.
Yelp

The church filed suit against the county alleging that its health department “went to extraordinary, and potentially unlawful, lengths to enforce its decrees” — including “levying more than $2 million in fines” as well as instituting a “multi-faceted surveillance program of the church and its members, breathtaking in scope and reminiscent of totalitarian regimes, rather than an American county health department,” Zweig wrote.

The surveillance methods included “stakeouts, forced in-person monitoring of prayer groups and other intimate activities, and tracking the cellular mobility data of churchgoers,” according to Zweig.

“Much of Santa Clara’s restrictions early on were tied to state requirements, which were harsher on churches than stores,” Zweig wrote.

“But Santa Clara expanded the chasm between houses of worship and retail establishments beyond what the state prescribed,” according to Zweig.

Zweig sought answers from local authorities in the Bay Area as to “why malls had looser conditions than churches” but he was “not given an explanation.”

The Post has sought comment from Santa Clara County and Calvary Chapel.

In response to Silver’s tweet, Zweig noted that “the ban on gathering in houses of worship lasted for seven months.”

Silver said that limiting church gatherings during the pandemic while allowing looser restrictions for retail businesses was problematic from a "civil liberties standpoint."
Silver said that limiting church gatherings during the height of the pandemic while allowing looser restrictions for retail businesses was problematic from a “civil liberties standpoint.”
Andrew Toth/Getty Images for AWXII

“Many of these people were suffering from addiction issues, isolation, depression, and rely on the church for support,” according to Zweig.

“These are also public health concerns.”

Silver replied that “most of the evidence suggests that extended lockdowns and closures were bad from a utilitarian/consequentialist standpoint,” though he added the caveat that it was “hard to prove.”

“But they were also bad from a civil liberties standpoint, especially when we’re talking about religious worship,” Silver tweeted.

Silver rose to national prominence in 2008 when he accurately predicted the results of the presidential and congressional elections while heading the FiveThirtyEight election forecast unit of the New York Times.

East Valley Pentecostal Church in San Jose in January 2021.
Houses of worship were under strict limitations during the pandemic.
East Valley Pentecostal Church

In 2013, Silver and his site migrated from the Times to Disney-owned ESPN. In 2018, FiveThirtyEight was acquired by ESPN’s corporate sister, ABC News.

Silver has emerged in recent months as a critic of public health officials’ handling of the COVID pandemic.

In August, he tweeted that “liberal public health elites” pressured Pfizer to delay fast-track approval of its COVID-19 vaccine until after the 2020 presidential election — thus denying then-President Donald Trump a political win before voters headed to the polls.

“‘Trump pushed for vaccine approvals too fast’ is the worst possible critique of the Trump administration’s COVID policy,” Silver tweeted last summer.

“That probably saved a lot of lives. If anything approval should have been faster.”

In a subsequent tweet, Silver wrote that “liberal public health elites” pushed Pfizer to “change its original protocols” that govern its authorization of vaccines so that the decision would be put off until after Election Day two years ago.

https://nypost.com/2023/03/07/nate-silver-blasts-covid-lockdowns-that-closed-churches/

Americans kidnapped in Mexico may have been confused for Haitian smugglers

 The four US citizens who were violently abducted after traveling to Mexico for a cosmetic procedure may have been kidnapped in a case of mistaken identity, a source close to the investigation says.

Latavia “Tay” McGee, Shaeed Woodard, Zindell Brown and Eric James Williams, all of South Carolina, were located in the border city of Matamoros on Tuesday — with two of them found dead, another injured and the fourth unharmed, said Tamaulipas Gov. Américo Villarreal.

A former law enforcement official with ties to the investigation told the Dallas Morning News this week that the kidnappers may have mistaken the foursome for Haitian smugglers.

The quartet disappeared five days ago, after their white minivan came under fire in Matamoros in the state of Tamaulipas.

disturbing video of the abduction that circulated on the internet over the weekend showed gunmen in bulletproof vests pushing a woman into the flatbed of a truck.

The unidentified suspects then grabbed two men in the party, who at that point appeared either wounded or dead, and threw them in the same flatbed.

The group's white minivan with the doors open, halted  in the middle of the street.
The foursome was abducted from their white minivan March 4.
AP

“All of a sudden [the gunmen] were in front of us,” an anonymous witness told the Associated Press of the broad-daylight abduction.

“I entered a state of shock, nobody honked their horn, nobody moved. Everybody must have been thinking the same thing: ‘If we move, they will see us, or they might shoot us.’ ”

A bystander, a Mexican national, was killed in the carnage.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, asked about the case at a press conference Monday, said, “I believe it will be resolved. I hope so.”

One of the kidnapped Americans was in the country to get tummy-tuck surgery, a relative of a victim has said.

While the investigation remains ongoing, Matamoros’ reputation for gun violence as cartel wars continue to rage had contributed to initial speculation that the abduction was drug-related. 

The possible mistaken-identity angle recalls when nine dual US-Mexican citizens were killed on a rural road in Sonora after a cartel allegedly mistook their group for rivals in November 2019.

A photograph of the abduction site.
Latavia “Tay” McGee, Shaeed Woodard, Zindell Brown and Eric James Williams were violently abducted after entering Mexico.

Those nine victims — three mothers and six children from a nearby Mormon community — were found riddled with bullets and burned in their cars. One of the victims, Christina Langford, was reportedly shot in the chest when she ran out of her Chevy to frantically signal the attackers to stop shooting.

“They were ambushed by the Mexican cartels; shot, burned and murdered in cold blood,” relative Kendra Lee Miller lamented on Facebook at the time. “These were innocent civilians, American citizens simply trying to live peaceful lives.”

https://nypost.com/2023/03/07/kidnapped-americans-may-have-been-case-of-mistaken-identity/

‘TEXIT’: Lawmaker wants voters to decide Texas secession from U.S.

 A Texas state lawmaker wants the Lone Star state to secede from the United States — and he’s putting it to a vote.

If passed in the state Legislature, the Texas Independence Referendum Act, or TEXIT, would allow Texans to vote on whether the state “should reassert its status as an independent nation’ during the next general election.

“The Texas Constitution is clear that all political power resides in the people,” State Rep. Bryan Slaton (R) said in a statement.

“After decades of continuous abuse of our rights and liberties by the federal government, it is time to let the people of Texas make their voices heard.”

If a majority votes “yes” on H.B. 3596, ” a committee will be established to investigate the feasibility of independence from the Union and propose options and potential plans for independence to the Texas Legislature.”Tweet

State Rep. Bryan Slaton shared the proposal to Twitter on Monday.
Faceboko / Bryan Slaton

Slaton included a petition supporting the bill’s passage in his announcement of the proposal on Twitter. He noted that similar legislation had previously been proposed but failed to receive a hearing from the State Affairs committee and died.

The lawmaker added that he was “proud” to be filing the bill on the anniversary of the fall of the Alamo.

“On this 187th anniversary of the fall of the Alamo I’m proud to file this bill to let the people of Texas vote on the future of our State. Texas was born out of a desire for liberty and self-governance, and that desire continues to burn in the hearts of all Texans,” Slaton said.

Bryan Slaton
Slaton said he was “proud” to be filing the bill on the anniversary of the fall of the Alamo.
Facebook / Bryan Slaton

The bill is supported by the Texas National Movement, an organization of about 440,000 pushing for the state’s independence, but it has also been condemned by state lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.

“This ridiculous bill is the very definition of hypocritical & seditious treason & it is already dead,” tweeted Republican state Rep. Jeff Leach.

Texas has tried to secede from the US on several occasions, however, the 1868 Supreme Court case Texas v. White established that states cannot unilaterally secede from the union.

Bryan Slaton
The bill is supported by the Texas National Movement, an organization of about 440,000 pushing for the state’s independence.
Facebook / Bryan Slaton

Slaton’s “TEXIT” proposal comes two weeks after Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) called for a “national divorce,” a phrase she has frequently used to suggest dividing the country along political lines.

“We need a national divorce,” Greene tweeted on President’s Day

“We need to separate by red states and blue states and shrink the federal government. Everyone I talk to says this. From the sick and disgusting woke culture issues shoved down our throats to the Democrat’s [sic] traitorous America Last policies, we are done.” 

https://nypost.com/2023/03/07/texit-texas-lawmaker-introduces-bill-to-vote-on-secession/

Merck Highlights Promising Data From Two Candidates In Heart Diseases

 

  • Merck & Co Inc (NYSE: MRKannounced full results from the Phase 3 STELLAR trial, which evaluated sotatercept in combination with stable background therapy for adult patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH).

  • Sotatercept significantly improved exercise capacity, increasing the 6-minute walk distance (6MWD) by 40.8 meters from baseline at week 24, the study's primary endpoint.

  • In addition, the sotatercept demonstrated statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvements in eight of nine secondary outcome measures.

  • Sotatercept reduced the risk of clinical worsening or death by 84% compared to placebo, with a median follow-up of 32.7 weeks.

  • The safety profile of sotatercept was generally consistent with that observed in previous studies with sotatercept.

  • Separately, Merck announced results from the Phase 2b clinical trial evaluating MK-0616 for hypercholesterolemia.

  • At week 8, all doses of MK-0616 significantly reduced LDL-C compared to the placebo, and the placebo-adjusted reduction from baseline ranged from 41.2% to 60.9%.