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Brewing scandal? NY’s true nursing home death toll cloaked in secrecy

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Cuomo has refused calls for an independent inquiry.

It was a controversial decision at the time.

In March, Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo ordered nursing homes to accept coronavirus patients. The goal was to free up hospital beds. Families of loved ones in those homes worried about the consequences. Their fears were proven correct.

Over 6,400 patients have died in New York’s nursing homes and long-term care facilities. But that doesn’t tell the whole story.

New York’s Dept. of Health is likely undercounting that number after it decided to include only those who died in the nursing homes and not those who were transported to hospitals and died there. If hospital deaths were included, the number would rise by another 1,600 at least.

Given what is known about the disease now, to move coronavirus patients to elder-care facilities seems like madness.

Fox News Meteorologist Janice Dean, whose in-laws died of coronavirus in nursing homes (one of them wasn’t counted as a nursing-home victim due to the health department’s decision), said there were many other places where they could have put the coronavirus patients.

However, Cuomo has so far avoided any political fallout for his decision. “He’s never taken any responsibility at all. He continues to blame everyone, including Fox News,” Dean said in an emotional interview on Tuesday. She noted that Cuomo has even blamed the “people who died in nursing homes.”

Nearly every time Cuomo is questioned about New York’s nursing home death toll, he brushes off criticism as politically motivated and notes that his state’s percentage of nursing home deaths out of its overall COVID-19 death toll is around 20 percent, far less than Pennsylvania’s 68 percent, Massachusetts’ 64 percent and New Jersey’s 44 percent.

Boston University geriatrics expert Thomas Perls said it doesn’t make sense that nursing home resident deaths as a percentage of total deaths in many nearby states are more than triple what was reported in New York.

“Whatever the cause, there is no way New York could be truly at 20 percent,” Perls said.

Dr. Michael Wasserman, president of the California Association of Long Term Care Medicine, said it is unethical of New York to not break out the deaths of nursing home residents at hospitals. “From an epidemiological and scientific perspective, there is absolutely no reason not to count them.”

Another group of numbers also suggests an undercount.

State health department surveys show 21,000 nursing home beds are lying empty this year, 13,000 more than expected — an increase of almost double the official state nursing home death tally. While some of that increase can be attributed to fewer new admissions and people pulling their loved ones out, it suggests that many others who aren’t there anymore died.

Cuomo reversed the order under pressure in early May. And his health department later released an internal report that concluded asymptomatic nursing home staffers were the real spreaders of the virus, not the 6,300 recovering patients released from hospitals into nursing homes.

But epidemiologists and academics derided the study for a flawed methodology that sidestepped key questions and relied on selective stats, including the state’s official death toll figures.

Cuomo has refused calls for an independent inquiry.

(World Israel News).

IDF attacks Hamas targets in Gaza

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Fighter jets, combat helicopters and IDF tanks attack Hamas targets in retaliation for incendiary balloon attacks.

Fighter jets, combat helicopters and IDF tanks attacked a number of terrorist targets belonging to the Hamas terrorist organization in Gaza overnight Tuesday.

The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said that the air strike targeted a military compound, underground infrastructure and observation posts of the organization.

The air strikes were carried out in response to the firing of incendiary balloons from the Gaza Strip toward Israeli territory during the past week.

“The IDF takes all terrorist activity against Israeli territory very seriously and will continue to act as much as necessary against attempts to harm Israeli citizens,” the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said.

It was further stated that “the Hamas terrorist organization bears responsibility for what is happening in and out of the Gaza Strip, and it will bear the consequences of the terrorist acts against the citizens of Israel.”

As of Tuesday evening, more than 60 fires had started in various areas adjacent to the Gaza Strip from incendiary balloons that landed in the region.

The IDF on Tuesday afternoon fired at a squad of incendiary balloon launchers to deter them and prevent them from launching the balloons.

This is a developing story. Please check for updates.

(Arutz 7).

Israel summons Belgian ambassador over country’s promotion of anti-Israel hate

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Watchdog group that exposed Belgium’s anti-Israel funding calls for investigation.

The Foreign Ministry summoned Belgian ambassador to Israel Jean-Luc Bodson and handed him a reprimand over Belgium’s support of NGOs that are working to shut out any pro-Israel dialog there, Israel Army Radio reported Tuesday.

The move came in the wake of a report by the Jerusalem-based watchdog group NGO Monitor that revealed last month that the Belgium gives funding to anti-Israel groups that call for “mitigating the influence of pro-Israel voices.”

“The ministry takes very seriously funding organizations whose stated purpose is to undermine support for Israel,” said Anna Azri, Israel’s Deputy Director General for Europe. “With this funding, the Belgian government undermines the discourse for Palestinian-Israeli understanding and reconciliation and removes the prospect of a peaceful solution between the two peoples.”

The NGO Monitor report revealed that the Belgian government gave aid to Palestinians via several NGOs whose stated goals include shutting out pro-Israel dialog.

“Belgium, including many government officials and ministers, is one of the worst promoters of hatred against Israel and anti-Zionism, often mixed with other forms of anti-Semitism,” NGO Monitor Director Prof. Gerald Steinberg told World Israel News.

“They provide millions to propaganda organizations and NGOs linked to Palestinian terror groups, under the facades of ‘human rights,’ international law, and promoting peace. Now that this is all out in the open and the Israeli Foreign Minister is pushing back, the hope is that at least some of this hatred and the embrace of Palestinian myths will recede.”

Steinberg said the Belgian government needs to “freeze all funding to NGOs dealing with Israel and the Palestinians, and launch an independent investigation so that officials, members of parliament, journalists, and taxpayers find out where all this money was going.”

In order to end what he called “abuses of the NGO process,” Steinberg said the EU needs new regulation.

“Belgium, like the rest of Europe, needs to establish appropriate regulations, including full transparency and ending such unacceptable abuses of the NGO process,” Steinberg said.

The diplomatic incident is the latest in an ongoing battle with Belgium over its embrace of anti-Israel organizations and anti-Semitic incidents.

In February this year the Foreign Ministry took similar steps following Belgium’s support for anti-Israel resolutions and speakers at the UN.

Israel and Jewish organizations are also angered by the Belgian government’s refusal to intervene in the annual Aalst Carnival parade that has featured blatantly anti-Semitic caricatures.

(World Israel News).

Report: US promises PA Israel will not apply sovereignty

PA reportedly agrees to renew ties with US after receiving
assurances there will be no Israeli sovereignty in Judea and Samaria.

The Palestinian Authority (PA) has received a promise from the United States that Israel will not unilaterally apply its sovereignty over any part of Judea and Samaria, Channel 12 News commentator Ehud Yaari reported.

According to the report, the PA agreed to renew ties with the US after receiving the promise.

MK Ayelet Shaked reacted with anger to the reports that the US was now officially against the application of Israeli sovereignty.

“There is no sovereignty and we knew from the first moment that the left-wing government was formed under Netanyahu and Gantz that this would not happen. Netanyahu missed a historic opportunity to change the crooked reality of the Middle East,” Shaked said.

(Arutz 7).

OU Kosher Presents a Free Virtual Kashrus Seminar – REGISTER HERE

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In response to community demand, OU Kosher is proud to launch our new Community Relations department with the goal of providing resources to benefit you. This includes shiurim, publications, workshops and insights into OU Kosher’s operations.

As such, we are pleased to present a week-long advanced seminar in kashrus as you prepare for Elul in a more meaningful way. The conference will take place from Monday, August 17 – Thursday, August 20, from 10:30am -12:30pm.

Each day of the conference, we will focus on a different topic – featuring an in-depth shiur followed by a practical workshop tied to that theme. The topics include: bedikas tolaim; shechita; kashering; and cheese. Mar’ei Mekomos and source materials will be provided. The seminar will culminate in a question and answer session with members of OU Kosher’s leadership.

The conference will take place online this year, as our headquarters in Manhattan are closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. We invite you to join us via zoom or teleconference call. Space is limited, so register today by logging on to oukosher.org/askou or by emailing koshereducation@ou.org.

We would like to thank the Harry H. Beren Foundation of Lakewood, NJ, for their support in helping to make this event possible.

OU Kosher, the world’s largest kosher certification agency, certifies more than 1 million ingredients in 10,000 plants in more than 100 countries. The agency certifies two-thirds
of all kosher-certified foods in the United States. For more information, please visit https://oukosher.org/.

(Matzav).

Former Major League Player Cody Decker Says Anti-Semitism Is ‘Rampant’ In Pro Baseball

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Former pro baseball player Cody Decker said that anti-Semitism is “rampant throughout baseball” and that an Oakland Athletics coach should be suspended for making a Nazi salute after a game.

Decker, who played briefly for the San Diego Padres and for Israel’s national team in the World Baseball Classic, spoke candidly on the topic with TMZ Sports on Saturday. He detailed several instances over the course of his career in which he was singled out for being Jewish and called Jewish slurs by fans and teammates.

Decker said that while playing a minor league game against the Frisco Rough Riders in Texas, several members of the opposing team called him and fellow Jewish teammate Nate Freiman “kikes.” He also said he was fired from a team the day after being called into a coach’s office to “explain my Judaism to him because he was born again Christian.”

And in 2012, Decker said he was at a bar with teammates when a group of girls asked him to leave the table when they found out he was Jewish.

The talk was spurred by a recent incident involving Oakland A’s bench coach Ryan Christenson, who was widely criticized for making a Nazi salute — he claims “unintentionally” — after a recent game against the Texas Rangers.

“In the world today of Covid, I adapted our elbow bump, which we do after wins, to create some distance with the players,” Christenson said in a statement last week. “My gesture unintentionally resulted in a racist and horrible salute that I do not believe in. What I did is unacceptable and I deeply apologize.”

Decker said he accepted Christenson’s apology but that he should be educated on the issue and suspended nonetheless.

“Actions have consequences. That’s not cancel culture, that’s life,” Decker said.

Decker took issue with the A’s response for saying it “looked like a Nazi salute.”

“No, he did a Nazi salute. He did a Nazi salute twice,” Decker said. “Let’s not sugarcoat around it … I really, really despise their response. I hate every half-measure response Major League Baseball always makes.”

(Vosizneias).

LA County hopeful trend line endures as coronavirus hospitalizations drop to 1,568

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The hospitalization numbers were averaging about 2,000 a day last week.

Los Angeles County’s coronavirus hospitalizations continued to decline on Sunday, Aug. 9, with 1,568 confirmed COVID-19 patients hospitalized and 31% in intensive care — down from 1,610 on Saturday, and down significantly from the 2,200 level of about a month ago.

The hospitalization numbers were averaging about 2,000 a day last week. The recent trendline buoyed public health officials’ hopes that efforts to tighten up pandemic-propelled “Safer at home” rules — including shutting down bars and barring restaurants and haircutters from doing business indoors — were working.

The county reported 1,789 new cases of COVID-19 and 10 more deaths on Sunday, bringing the county’s totals to 208,528 cases and 4,977 fatalities. The lower numbers were also encouraging, but may also be the result of scaled-down weekend record-keeping.

Sunday’s update arrived as the confirmed coronavirus cases in the U.S. reached 5 million, the highest of any nation in the world. California attained a grim milestone of its own last week, topping 10,000 deaths — and the county will pass 5,000 fatalities in the next few days.

The LA County update included all of the current lab reports from the state’s electronic lab report system, but did not include backlog numbers from a recent glitch in the system. State officials anticipate sending the backlog of lab reports over the upcoming days.

The technical glitch has not affected the reported number of hospitalizations, deaths or other key statistical categories.

Of the new deaths reported, three people were 80 or older, two were 65-79 and five were 50-64 years old. Eight people reported underlying health conditions.

Among people who have died since the pandemic began, officials reported 49% were Latino/Latinx, 24% were White, 15% were Asian, 10% were Black and less than 1% were Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander.

Sunday’s countywide results did not include updated numbers from Long Beach and Pasadena, cities that operate their own independent health departments. Pasadena reported 35 additional cases, for a total of 1,221, but added no additional deaths to its
total of 25 deaths. As of 3 p.m., Long Beach had not posted updated numbers, remaining at 8,775 cases and 181 deaths.

Countywide, younger residents continue to make up the majority of positive new cases. Of the new cases reported Sunday, 69% are under the age of 50.

“There are many people that are grieving the loss of a family member or friend who died as a result of COVID-19. We think about you every day and wish you healing and peace during this difficult time,” said Barbara Ferrer, the county’s director of public health. “As we begin to see the curve flattening again, I want to urge everyone to remain cautious and attentive to the reality of COVID-19; it is not going away any time soon. If we return to life as we knew it before the pandemic hit, we will see cases, hospitalizations and deaths increase once again. The protocols and protective measures provided by the health officer orders create opportunities for us to continue on a recovery journey — but only if they are followed.”

Ferrer urged residents to avoid parties and crowds, wear face coverings when out of their homes, maintain physical distance from people they don’t live with and wash their hands frequently.

Given the state’s past reporting system delays, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health urges any person with a positive lab result to call 1-833-540-0473
to connect with a public health specialist who can provide information about services and support.

Testing results were available for 1,932,963 individuals as of Sunday, with 10% of all people testing positive.

(LA Daily News).

Hillel launches initiative to assist college staff to combat campus anti-Semitism

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The Campus Climate Initiative will work with administrators to provide measurement tools, best practices, education and training designed to empower university leadership to understand ongoing threats.

Amid the rise in anti-Semitism on college campuses, Hillel International announced on Monday that it is launching a new initiative to ensure that university administrators and staff are trained to recognize and confront Jew-hatred.

The Campus Climate Initiative (CCI) will work with administrators to provide measurement tools, best practices, education and training designed to empower university leadership to understand the threats of anti-Semitism, take proactive steps to minimize them and directly address them when they occur.

The new initiative comes amid an alarming rise in anti-Semitic incidents on college campuses. Hillel measured 178 anti-Semitic incidents this past academic year on the North American campuses it serves—an all-time high even with months of campuses being physically closed due to the coronavirus.

Online harassment of Jewish students and anti-Semitic vandalism has continued in recent months, even with campuses closed. This dangerous trend has been surging for several years.

Anti-Semitic hate crimes and bias incidents on college campuses more than tripled from 2012 through 2019, according to the Anti-Defamation League. Government data shows that religious-based hate crimes on college campuses roughly doubled between 2009 and 2017; a majority of these reported crimes targeted Jews.

“All Jewish college students have the right to study in a safe, welcoming environment free of harassment,” said Hillel International president and CEO Adam Lehman. “Hillel is uniquely positioned to partner with colleges and universities to develop tools to prevent anti-Semitism on campus and help empower university administrators to respond decisively and aggressively when issues of anti-Semitism unfortunately arise.”

In addition to working closely with a cohort of pilot-program campuses, the Campus Climate Initiative will use digital and online collaboration to extend those successes broadly across a much larger field of college leaders, helping them create and refine best-practice policies and procedures customized to their individual campus cultures and environments.

CCI will also showcase its expertise by bringing together university and Jewish community leaders for national conferences and forums focusing on these issues.

(JNS).

Portland Rioters Set Fires, Use Mortar; 2 Officers Hurt

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Rioters outside a Portland police union building set fires and used a mortar to launch commercial grade fireworks at police and officials said Monday that two officers were injured and 16 demonstrators were arrested.

A day after they managed to get inside the union building and set a fire, the rioters on Sunday night blocked a road and set dumpster fires outside it, police said in a statement.

The fireworks were launched at police as they tried to clear out the demonstrators and one of the two officers treated at the scene suffered a burn on her neck.

The “protesters” who were arrested face misdemeanor charges of disorderly conduct or interfering with a peace officer. Their detentions came after nine protesters were arrested Saturday night and 24 Friday night.

Sunday night’s demonstration came after demonstrators marched to the building from
a nearby park. As police moved to break up the gathering, commercial-grade fireworks were thrown at officers, police said.

The department released photos of the officers’ injuries, including a photo of a face covering that the statement described as being “partially melted” from the fireworks.

The protests in Portland have happened nightly for 70 days since George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis.

The violence reached an apex when protesters targeted a federal courthouse last month that was defended by federal agents against attacking rioters in two straight weeks of nightly confrontations.

The federal agents withdrew more than a week ago amid hopes for calm, but the violent protests have resurfaced miles from the courthouse.

Three officers were injured in a protest Saturday night, including two who were treated at a hospital and released. And on Friday night, demonstrators defied orders to disperse and hurled rocks, frozen or hard-boiled eggs and commercial-grade fireworks at officers.

Some filled pool noodles with nails and put them on the road, causing extensive damage to a patrol vehicle, police said.

While violent, the gatherings over the last week have been smaller than the events in
front of the federal courthouse that drew thousands who turned out nightly to protest
the presence of the U.S. agents, who were protecting the federal courthouse downtown.

The police union building for the Portland Police Association is about 5 miles (8 kilometers) north of the federal courthouse.

(The Yeshiva World / AP).

Israeli Supreme Court forbids razing home of terrorist who killed IDF soldier

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Supreme Court judges block destruction of house of terrorist who murdered IDF soldier.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday slammed a decision be Supreme Court justices to block the razing of the house of the terrorist who killed an IDF soldier, saying the judges made a “mistake.”

“An unfortunate decision of the High Court. A big mistake. Terrorism must not be allowed to take hold! I demand further discussion – and at the same time we will continue to destroy terrorist homes,” Netanyahu tweeted following announcement of the decision.

Three High Court judges ruled 2-1 to accept a petition to block the destruction of the house owned by Palestinian terrorist Nazmi Abu-Bakr from Hebron who murdered IDF soldier Amit Ben Yigal in May when he dropped a cement block on his head from the roof of the building.

As soon as the murder charge was filed against Abu Bakr, the IDF announced their intention to demolish the house from which the block was thrown, as well as the apartment where the terrorist lives in the building with his family.

However, Abu Bakr’s family petitioned to the High Court of Justice in an attempt to prevent the demolition.

Of the three judge panel, Justice Yael Willner voted to reject he petition, saying the demolition was a “necessity in order to deter further attacks.”

She was overruled by Justices Mani Mazuz and George Karra, who accepted the petition.

“It is still not possible to ignore the serious harm that this entails to his innocent family members – to them isn’t attributed any involvement in the attack,” Mazuz argued.

Mazuz wrote in his ruling that the IDF should be allowed to seal the room where the terrorist was sleeping that night, saying that “in these circumstances I believe that in our case the principle of proportionality necessitates a mitigation of the damage, by converting the demolition into a partial sealing of the house.”

Judge Karra argued that there was no reason to destroy the terrorist’s family home by “demolishing the roof over their heads.”

Ben Yigal’s father, Baruch, lowered the Israeli flag in front of his home in protest.

“I just lowered the Israeli flag to half-mast to be seen by all the people of Israel. That I feel humiliated. The flag should not be raised on this day, it is not a good day for the people of Israel. Our IDF soldiers are pure warriors. May God preserve them,” Baruch Ben Yigal posted on social media.

(World Israel News).

 

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