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Monday, August 28, 2023

Fists Fly, Bodies Slammed As Antifa Crashes Anti-Migrant Protest At NYC Mayor's Mansion

 Cops had their hands full at the New York City mayor's mansion on Sunday when black-clad antifa counterprotestors showed up at a demonstration against Mayor Eric Adams' handling of the 2023 migrant crisis. 

Anti-migrant protestors scrap with a black-clad counterprotestor outside Gracie Mansion (Getty Images via Daily Mail)

More than 100,000 migrants have poured into New York City since April 2022, overwhelming the government's capacity to house and feed them. Many residents of the city and surrounding areas are growing increasingly resentful of the measures Adams has approved, from kicking wedding parties out of hotels to shipping migrants to suburban counties and even housing adult men in the gyms of actively-used elementary schools

New Yorkers are also alarmed by scenes like these

The latest flashpoint: The city's housing of 3,000 migrants in a tent city on Randall's Island, an expanse along the East River between Northern Manhattan and Queens dominated by parkland and recreational facilities. Taxpayers were already incensed over youth soccer fields and other leisure assets being converted to migrant housing -- and then came news that the city is spending $20 million per month on the migrant mini-city.  

Sunday's protest was headlined by Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa, who addressed the fed-up crowd with a microphone and PA system:

These migrants have jumped the queue,” he said. “And by the way, if I were a migrant and you gave me an opportunity to jump the queue and stay in a hotel, give me three square meals … — basically give me more than homeless people born in America have or veterans who are down on their luck have — you’re damn right they’re gonna keep coming!

Protesters held signs with slogans like "STOP REWARDING, START DEPORTING" and "AMERICANS OVER MIGRANTS." The New York Post quotes a Trump supporter as shouting "No migrants on Long Island! We pay a lot of property taxes!" 

Counterprotestors held signs reading "NO ONE CHOOSES TO BE A REFUGEE" and "HUMANITY HAS NO BORDERS." Some yelled "F**k white supremacist NYPD!" 

Sunday gave the world a clear front-runner for 2023's most moronic foray into leftist-agenda "intersectionality" (Getty Images via Daily Mail)

The highlight of the pre-combat action came when the anti-open-borders crowd taunted the leftists with chants of "PASTY WHITE LIBERALS!

It wasn't long before friction between the two groups of protestors inevitably erupted into a series of brawls... 

Here, it appears a black-masked antifa-type was in the midst of slapping an anti-open-immigration protestor when his world was positively rocked by a right-winger flying in to the rescue: 

This video shows the challenge facing NYPD cops as the skirmishes ebbed and flowed: 

As he'd promised in advance, Sliwa was eventually arrested for acts of civil disobedience, but not before he was seen intervening to break up some of the fights.

Sliwa wasn't the only one arrested. Here, cops swoop in and handcuff antifa affiliates: 

With the gates along the southern border literally welded open by the Biden administrationexpect more brawls in the months to come... 

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/fists-fly-bodies-slammed-antifa-crashes-anti-migrant-protest-nyc-mayors-mansion

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China drops COVID testing for international arrivals

 China is dropping its requirement for a negative COVID-19 test result for international visitors beginning Wednesday in its latest step toward reopening the country.

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin announced the testing update at a Monday briefing in Beijing.  

China has been slowly ending its pandemic-era restrictions in recent months as the world approaches the fourth anniversary of the emergence of COVID-19. In January, China ended quarantine requirements for its citizens from traveling abroad and has recently expanded the number of countries its citizens can travel to.

The country had only ended its “zero COVID policy” in December after years of tough restrictions. At times, the restrictions included full-city lockdowns and mandatory quarantines for those who were infected.

Visitors to China were previously required to isolate for weeks at a hotel designated by the government, and some residents were even forced to be locked in their homes in an attempt to keep the virus at bay.

These restrictions sparked protests in major cities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Nanjing. Shortly after the protests, China abruptly lifted its “zero COVID” policies, which a U.S.-funded study found may have led to nearly 2 million excess deaths in the months following.

Most countries have lifted pandemic-era traveling restrictions as the U.S. lifted its testing requirements in June 2022. However, there has been a recent uptick in late-summer COVID-19 hospitalizations in the U.S., stoking concerns that the virus is spreading.

https://thehill.com/policy/international/4174515-china-drops-covid-testing-for-international-arrivals/

Are Biden’s immigration policies allowing dangerous diseases into our country?

 Dr. Ashwin Vasan, New York City’s health commissioner, claims that the Biden administration’s border polices have produced an influx of migrants from the southern border who are bringing contagious diseases to New York City neighborhoods.

If Vasan is right, the administration should pause its programs for admitting migrants who have not gone through the visa application process until it has developed more effective methods for determining whether they are bringing communicable diseases into the country.

Why the administration’s policies attract so many undocumented migrants

Border security expert Todd Bensman says that whether migrants are willing to pay big fees to be smuggled across the border depends on how likely it is that they will be able get in and stay.

The likelihood of getting in and staying has been extraordinarily high during the Biden presidency. The administration has released more than 2 million illegal border crossers into the country, a number that would be much larger if it hadn’t had to expel more than 2 million illegal crossers pursuant to Title 42.

Moreover, the administration has virtually eliminated deportability for just being in the United States in violation of our laws. If illegal crossers can reach the interior of the country, it is extremely unlikely that they will be deported unless they are convicted for committing a serious crime here.

This also has made it worth the risk of incurring the expense of coming here from distant countries. 

For most of its history, the Border Patrol primarily encountered migrants from Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. The number of migrants coming from other countries has increased during the Biden presidency, which increases the likelihood that migrants are coming from countries that have uncontrolled communicable diseases.

The Border Patrol has combined “other country” statistics into a single category, which it has termed “historically atypical.”

In fiscal 2011, the Border Patrol encountered fewer than 8,000 migrants from historically atypical countries (3 percent of all encounters). By fiscal 2022, they encountered nearly 1 million migrants from historically atypical countries (43 percent of the encounters). And in the first six months of fiscal 2023, they encountered 557,310 migrants from historically atypical countries (53 percent of the encounters).

The migrants are coming from 160 different countries now. The majority of the migrants coming from historically atypical countries are coming from Venezuela, Cuba, Nicaragua or Haiti. But some are coming from as far away as China and Afghanistan.

The administration is encouraging undocumented migrants to come to the United States by creating what it calls “legal pathways.” It claims that it is using harsher measures to discourage migrants from crossing illegally between ports of entry instead of using the legal pathways, but it is deporting fewer illegal border crossers than it did before it adopted the new measures.

One of the legal pathways is a humanitarian parole initiative that offers parole to up to 30,000 migrants a month from Venezuelan, Cuba, Haiti and Nicaragua who do not have visas. Another is the CBP One mobile application program, which migrants without visas use to schedule an appointment to present themselves for inspection at a designated port of entry. The administration has used this program to admit more than 133,000 asylum seekers.

Communicable diseases

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), chickenpox is rare in the United States. But Vasan says there have been outbreaks of chickenpox in the shelters housing recently arriving migrants.

The CDC says chickenpox is highly contagious. If one person has it, up to 90 percent of the people close to that person will also become infected unless they are immune. And it can be very serious, even life-threatening.

Vasan also says that these migrants are bringing polio, which can permanently paralyze a person. Paralysis is fatal in between 2 and 10 percent of the cases because it damages the muscles that are needed to breathe.

Due to the success of the national polio vaccination program, the last naturally occurring cases of polio in the United States occurred in 1979. More recent polio infections are the result of travel or contact with someone who had an oral polio vaccine in another country.

The United States uses injectable polio vaccines, which are made from dead polio virus that cannot spread the disease. Many poorer countries use an oral vaccine that contains live polio virus, which can shed into the infected person’s feces. The virus then can spread in sewage and on unclean hands.

Vasan says that the polio virus is being found in New York sewage that matches the strains of polio caused by oral vaccines.

Measles is another extremely contagious communicable disease that is being brought to the United States from other countries.

The CDC says that although measles was declared eliminated in the United States in 2000, it has been brought to the United States in recent years by infected travelers from other countries and by Americans who are infected when they are in another country.

The Maryland Department of Health (MDH) has reported that a Maryland resident got malaria from someone who got it in another country and brought it to Maryland.

MDH Secretary Laura H. Scott said that, “Malaria was once common in the United States […] but we have not seen a case in Maryland that was not related to travel in over 40 years.”

Hansen’s disease — more commonly known as leprosy — is another example. It is very rare in the United States. But it has become endemic in Florida. According to CDC, circumstances indicate that the source of the leprosy was international migration of persons with the disease.

Apparently, therefore, Vasa’s concerns are legitimate.

This is a serious problem that the administration should address as soon as possible.

Nolan Rappaport was detailed to the House Judiciary Committee as an Executive Branch Immigration Law Expert for three years. He subsequently served as an immigration counsel for the Subcommittee on Immigration, Border Security and Claims for four years. Prior to working on the Judiciary Committee, he wrote decisions for the Board of Immigration Appeals for 20 years. 

https://thehill.com/opinion/immigration/4171403-are-bidens-immigration-policies-allowing-dangerous-diseases-into-our-country/

US Shale Pumps More Cash into Aging Oil Fields, Rystad Says

 US independent shale oil producers plowed money into output growth in the second quarter at the fastest rate in three years, a departure from the fiscal discipline that’s been the industry’s focus, according to a report from research firm Rystad Energy.

Reinvestment rate surged to 72% in the second quarter, highs not seen since 2020, according to the study focusing on 18 companies that collectively account for about 40% of US shale output.

The cash injection comes as the steep drop in output from US shale wells is turning out to be worse than expected, Rystad notes. The depleted fields have forced oil drillers to work even harder to keep production from slipping, research firm Enverus said in a separate study earlier this month.

But rising reinvestment rate is unlikely to last. “As inflationary pressures ease in the coming quarters and oil prices rebound, this spike will be a short-term anomaly instead of a shift of strategy,” said Matthew Bernstein, senior upstream analyst at Rystad. This means shale companies will likely stay focused on paying out shareholders in the form of buybacks and dividends as they have in the past two years.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/us-shale-pumps-more-cash-160028890.html

'Biden urged to get tough as millions lose Medicaid'

 Millions of people are being pushed off state Medicaid rolls as the U.S. dismantles one of the last major Covid-era safety nets, and congressional Democrats and health advocates want the Biden administration to do more to ensure people are protected. 

Nationwide, nearly 5.5 million people have been purged from state Medicaid rolls across 45 states and the District of Columbia, according to health policy research group KFF. 

At least 1 million of them are children, though that number is likely higher because not every state reports by age. 

Most people have been removed for “procedural” reasons, like missing or incorrect paperwork, or when the state has outdated contact information, even though they may still be eligible. 

Last year, Congress gave the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) more power to ensure that states are not improperly removing Medicaid beneficiaries. The agency can tell states to pause procedural terminations, file a corrective action plan, or even yank federal funding.

“We certainly would like to see the Biden administration take swift and decisive action to use their enforcement tools as needed, when the number of children losing coverage is high, and in particular, when there are a lot of procedural terminations,” said Joan Alker, executive director of Georgetown University’s Center for Children and Families.

On Capitol Hill, Democrats have been calling on the administration to take more aggressive action against states that don’t try to slow high rates of procedural unenrollment.

Lawmakers have been raising concerns since states started reporting data in June.

At the time, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and House Energy and Commerce Committee ranking member Frank Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.) urged CMS to threaten to withhold funding from state Medicaid programs if they don’t undertake good-faith efforts to prevent procedural terminations.

Most recently, the entire Texas Democratic delegation, led by Rep. Lloyd Doggett, sent a letter to CMS on Aug. 22 urging “swift intervention … to prevent the catastrophic loss of coverage occurring in Texas, which already has the disgraceful distinction of the most uninsured people in the country.”

Texas reported more than 600,000 residents had their health coverage terminated over the past four months. Nearly half a million of them were children, and nearly 400,000 had their coverage ended because of red tape.  

Experts said Texas should be considered an outlier because it has such a large Medicaid program — and since it hasn’t expanded Medicaid like most states, the majority of its enrollees are children.

“But the fact that 81 percent of disenrollment were among children, but they only comprise 72 percent of total enrollment, it does suggest that perhaps … there may be cause for concern,” said Jen Tolbert, director of the State Health Reform and Data Program at KFF.

In addition, whistleblowers in the state Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) identified nearly 100,000 people who had their health coverage ended after they were erroneously booted from the program.

While the state has been working with the federal government to reinstate coverage to those impacted, Doggett and the other Democrats said they don’t have confidence the state will protect people. They urged CMS to step in and pause the process before the next round of redetermination begins Sept. 9.

“To date, the [agency’s] response has been nominal and failed to ensure Texas fulfills its responsibility to families,” Doggett’s office told The Hill. 

An agency spokeswoman said, “Texas is currently in compliance with CMS unwind requirements,” in response to questions from The Hill.

“Redetermining Medicaid eligibility for approximately 6 million Texans over 12 months is a massive undertaking, and HHSC has planned this unwinding effort for more than a year.”

Before the pandemic, people churned in and out of Medicaid for various reasons. Participants lost their coverage if they earned too much or didn’t provide the information needed to verify their income or residency.

But during the public health emergency period, income changes or missed paperwork didn’t matter. If someone was enrolled in Medicaid in March 2020, or if they became eligible at any point during the pandemic, they remained eligible the entire time.

As a result, Medicaid enrollment grew more than 30 percent and covered more than 90 million people. 

But Congress ended those protections, and states have been able to reassess eligibility and kick people off Medicaid rolls since April.

CMS has expressed concern for months that many states are rushing through the process, but the administration has largely tread lightly. 

Most of the communications with states have been behind the scenes. To date, CMS said it has required 14 states to pause Medicaid disenrollments for part or all of their populations.

But CMS did not identify which ones. Officials have been reluctant to single out individual states, or even say what might trigger stronger federal action, though there’s hope that approach may be changing. 

Earlier this month, the agency sent letters to state health officials in all 50 states and D.C., warning that many are failing to meet federal requirements about determining Medicaid coverage. It was the first time the agency publicly disclosed its oversight and enforcement priorities.

The letters flagged three key areas of concern: high rates of procedural terminations, long call center wait times and call abandonment rates, and slow application processing.

While much of the attention has been on the Republican-led states rushing through the process, the letters cited a total of 36 states for at least one problem, including blue states. 

A Senate Democratic aide said those letters were viewed as “a step in the right direction,” but there are still concerns over the degree of coverage losses. 

Tolbert said while she appreciates CMS not wanting to publicly call anyone out, it’s hard to tell how much of an effect the agency’s efforts are having.  

“Because we don’t know where CMS is pushing and which states they are pushing, we’re just having to guess whether those actions are having an effect, or as strong as perhaps advocates and others in the state might want to see,” she said.

A CMS spokesperson said the agency “takes its monitoring and oversight role during Medicaid and CHIP renewals incredibly seriously, and is doing everything in its power to help states to go above and beyond the minimum requirements to keep people covered.” 

It added, “We will not hesitate to hold states accountable for failing to follow federal requirements.”

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/4172130-biden-urged-to-get-tough-as-millions-lose-medicaid/

CENTENE CORPORATION SIGNS DEFINITIVE AGREEMENT TO DIVEST CIRCLE HEALTH GROUP

 Centene to sell Circle Health Group to Pure Health at an enterprise value of approximately $1.2B

Sale reflects continued execution of Centene's value creation efforts and portfolio review

 Centene Corporation (NYSE: CNC), a leading healthcare enterprise committed to helping people live healthier lives, announced today that it has signed a definitive agreement to sell Circle Health Group ("Circle Health"), one of the U.K.'s largest independent operators of hospitals, to PureHealth, the largest integrated healthcare network in the Middle East. The transaction reflects Centene's continued execution of its value creation efforts as the company refocuses its portfolio on core lines of business. The enterprise value is approximately $1.2B, inclusive of debt assumed.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/centene-corporation-signs-definitive-agreement-113000731.html