Coronavirus live updates: Restrictions easing state by state

India reported more than 8000 new cases of the coronavirus in a single day, another record high that topped the deadliest week in the country.

Confirmed infections have risen to 182,143, with 5164 fatalities, including 193 in the last 24 hours, the Health Ministry said Sunday.

Russia has recorded nearly 9000 new cases of the coronavirus, roughly consistent with the increases reported over the past two weeks.

The national coronavirus task force said Saturday that 4555 Russians have died of COVID-19 and 396,575 infections have been confirmed overall.

A man wears a face mask to protect against coronavirus this week in St Petersburg, Russia. (Source: Associated Press)

The relatively low mortality rate compared with other countries has prompted scepticism domestically and abroad.

In a bid to dispel suspicions that authorities are trying to lower the death toll for political reasons, Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova explained Friday that Russia’s count contains only those confirmed to have died of the infection, but she also gave figures for people who tested positive for the virus but died of other causes.

If all categories are counted as COVID-19 deaths, the nation’s total toll for April would stand at 2713, or nearly 60 per cent more than the previously announced number.

– Reported with Associated Press

Source by [author_name]

Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 sales offer $110 price cuts at Best Buy

0

If you’re after a powerful tablet for flexible work, streaming, or gaming, you’ll want to check out the latest Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 deals at Best Buy. While an iPad Pro will set you back closer to $900 right now, you’ll find these cheap tablets up for just $549 at the cheapest end. 

That’s the price of a 128GB Tab S6, but if you can stretch just a little further you can double your storage for just $619 this weekend. That’s a $110 discount on the larger model, and a fantastic price cut on one of Samsung’s most recent releases. 

Source link

Loving the Lockdown

While many are eager for life to get back to pre-virus normal, some introverts, and even some extroverts, are savoring their time sheltering in place.

Source link

Ndlozi goes off on Twitter rant against ACDP leader

Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) MP and former party spokesperson, Dr Mbuyiseni Ndlozi set Twitter alight on Sunday, 31 May 2020, by launching a no holds barred attack against the African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP) leader Reverend Kenneth Meshoe, over the party’s repeated calls for religious gatherings to be allowed under the lockdown.

Meshoe is a gambler

In a series of tweets, Ndlozi called his fellow MP a “gambler” and also accused him of seeking to make profit off the church, even going to the trouble of citing a scripture from the bible.

“You are a gambler Kenneth. This is the definition of your dishonest, irresponsible and dangerous Faith: Gambling. You want to gamble with peoples’ lives just so you collect tithes! We should do to you what Jesus did to those who were gambling in Jerusalem Temple in Matt 21:12…”, he tweeted.

“Why Kenneth, would you go against ZCC, Nazareth, Methodist who say churches must be closed? What drives you to want churches to open even when the Covid-19 death toll and infections is on the rise? Like profiteers in mines, you think of Church as Job creating, making money for (you)”, Ndlozi’s twitter thread further read.

Churches should remain open under lockdown

After President Cyril Ramaphosa seemingly succumbed to pressure by declaring that religious gatherings including churches would be allowed to operate under level three of the lockdown, Meshoe was one of several who welcomed the decision.

The decision sparked an outcry from several sectors of society, most of them citing concerns over churches being susceptible to a wave of infections.

Meshoe along with others in the religious fraternity said they were confident health measures would be followed.

“Since the protocols are in place, churches and South Africans know there are regulations they must follow and there are health protocols they must observe and implement, and because of that we don’t believe that the church will be a place where people will be infected”, he is quoted as saying to TimesLIVE.

“Infections take place anywhere where there are human beings and now to sideline the church and say people must not go to church because they will be infected was an unjust and unbiased attitude and it has been dealt a death blow”, Meshoe also said.



Source link

Trump’s National Security Adviser Denies ‘Systemic Racism’ Across U.S. Police Forces

White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien on Sunday denied that there’s “systemic racism” across police agencies in the U.S., despite numerous incidents in which officers have harassed or killed unarmed Black men, including George Floyd in Minneapolis earlier this week.

Asked on CNN’s “State of the Union” whether systemic racism is a problem within these agencies, O’Brien said no.

″I don’t think there’s systemic racism,” O’Brien said. “I think 99.9% of our law enforcement officers are great Americans. And many of them are African American, Hispanic, Asian ― they’re working the toughest neighborhoods.”

O’Brien added: “But you know what? There are some bad apples in there. There are some bad cops that are racist, and there are cops that maybe don’t have the right training. … And they need to be rooted out.”

O’Brien said that he’s “so proud” of the way police have handled the current protests “with restraint.”

Floyd died Monday in Minneapolis after a police officer knelt on his neck, sparking nationwide protests. Photos and videos from the protests show police in some areas fired rubber bullets and pepper-sprayed demonstrators. In New York City, a police van appeared to drive into a crowd of protesters.

Police have arrested several journalists, including HuffPost’s Chris Mathias, while they were covering the protests. Mathias was released hours after being taken into custody by New York City police officers on Saturday.

Black men and boys face the highest risk of being killed by police, according to a study published last year in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences. They are killed at a rate of 96 out of 100,000 deaths, according to the study. By comparison, white men and boys face a lower rate of 39 per 100,000 deaths, despite representing a much larger portion of the U.S. population.

“We have systems and institutions that produce racially disparate outcomes, regardless of the intentions of the people who work within them,” Washington Post columnist Radley Balko wrote in 2018. “When you consider that much of the criminal-justice system was built, honed and firmly established during the Jim Crow era — an era almost everyone, conservatives included, will concede [was] rife with racism — this is pretty intuitive.”

Balko added: “It’s pretty clear to me that the evidence of racial bias in our criminal-justice system isn’t just convincing — it’s overwhelming.”

Earlier on Sunday’s “State of the Union,” Melvin Carter, the mayor of St. Paul, Minnesota, dismissed claims that there are just a few bad apples” within U.S. police forces. He pointed to bystander video that showed four police officers ignoring Floyd’s statements that he couldn’t breathe as one of them knelt on his neck.

“If it was just one, you might be able to say, ‘Rogue officer, bad apple,’” Carter said. “but when you have four officers in the video all responsible for the taking of George Floyd’s life, it points to a … normalized culture that’s … been accepted and that cannot be a part of our culture moving forward.”



Source by [author_name]

Caught on camera, police explode in rage and violence across the US

0

Over the past 72 hours, people across the US have captured what may be the most comprehensive live picture of police brutality ever. Any one of the videos we’ve seen could have sparked a national discussion, with people picking apart their elements, searching for context to argue about, and digging through the pasts of everyone involved. But it’s not just one act of violence, it’s everywhere. On Saturday, the names of several police officers allegedly seen perpetrating violence in different cities began trending on Twitter as people worked to cross-reference faces from videos with personal information on the web.

Here is just a short list of the scenes that have played out this week:

The violence appears so widespread and consistent that you could be mistaken for thinking it’s coordinated at a national level. To some extent, it is: President Trump has cheered on police violence like a fan at a sports event, and police departments across the country have styled themselves as military forces after two decades of hand-me-downs from the War on Terror.

“US cities face toll of violent protests,” says a headline at the top of Fox News. “Fury in the streets as protests spread across the US,” says The New York Times. “Fire and fury spread across the US,” says The Washington Post. “Wave of rage and anguish sweeps dozens of US cities,” says CNN. But whose rage? Whose fury? Whose violence?

Here’s another: ABC local news in Utah runs a graphic saying “violent protests in Salt Lake City.” In the background of the video, police knock an elderly man with a cane to the ground. He was simply standing near a bus stop.

We can’t deny what we are seeing, and we must describe it accurately. Whose violence? Whose rage? It’s from American police.

Warning: the images shown below are disturbing.

Source link

NASA Astronauts Arrive At Space Station After SpaceX Docking

0

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — SpaceX delivered two astronauts to the International Space Station for NASA on Sunday, following up a historic liftoff with an equally smooth docking in yet another first for Elon Musk’s company.

With test pilots Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken poised to take over manual control if necessary, the SpaceX Dragon capsule pulled up to the station and docked automatically, no assistance needed.

It was the first time a privately built and owned spacecraft carried astronauts to the orbiting lab in its nearly 20 years. NASA considers this the opening volley in a business revolution encircling Earth and eventually stretching to the moon and Mars.



The SpaceX Dragon crew capsule, with NASA astronauts Doug Hurley, left, and Robert Behnken, docked with the International Space Station on Sunday.

The docking occurred just 19 hours after a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket blasted off Saturday afternoon from Kennedy Space Center, the nation’s first astronaut launch to orbit from home soil in nearly a decade.

Thousands jammed surrounding beaches, bridges and towns to watch as SpaceX became the world’s first private company to send astronauts into orbit, and ended a nine-year launch drought for NASA.

A few hours before docking, the Dragon riders reported that the capsule was performing beautifully. Just in case, they slipped back into their pressurized launch suits and helmets for the rendezvous.

The SpaceX Falcon 9 was the first privately built and owned spacecraft to carry astronauts to the orbiting lab.



The SpaceX Falcon 9 was the first privately built and owned spacecraft to carry astronauts to the orbiting lab.

The three space station residents kept cameras trained on the incoming capsule for the benefit of flight controllers at SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California, and NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Gleaming white in the sunlight, the Dragon was easily visible from a few miles out, its nose cone open and exposing its docking hook as well as a blinking light. The capsule loomed ever larger on live NASA TV as it closed the gap.

Hurley and Behnken took over the controls and did a little piloting less than a couple hundred yards (meters) out as part of the test flight, before putting it back into automatic for the final approach. Hurley said the capsule handled “really well, very crisp.”

Spectators watch from a bridge in Titusville, Fla. as SpaceX Falcon 9 lifts off with two NASA astronauts on Saturday.



Spectators watch from a bridge in Titusville, Fla. as SpaceX Falcon 9 lifts off with two NASA astronauts on Saturday.

SpaceX and NASA officials had held off on any celebrations until after Sunday morning’s docking — and possibly not until the two astronauts are back on Earth sometime this summer.

NASA has yet to decide how long Hurley and Behnken will spend at the space station, somewhere between one and four months. While they’re there, the Dragon test pilots will join the one U.S. and two Russian station residents in performing experiments and possibly spacewalks to install fresh station batteries.

In a show-and-tell earlier Sunday, the astronauts gave a quick tour of the Dragon’s sparkling clean insides, quite spacious for a capsule. They said the liftoff was pretty bumpy and dynamic, nothing the simulators could have mimicked.

NASA astronauts Douglas Hurley, left, and Robert Behnken make their way to Pad 39-A, at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Cana



NASA astronauts Douglas Hurley, left, and Robert Behnken make their way to Pad 39-A, at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., on Saturday.

The blue sequined dinosaur accompanying them — their young sons’ toy, named Tremor — was also in good shape, Behnken assured viewers. Tremor was going to join Earthy, a plush globe delivered to the space station on last year’s test flight of a crew-less crew Dragon. Behnken said both toys would return to Earth with them at mission’s end.

An old-style capsule splashdown is planned.

After liftoff, Musk told reporters that the capsule’s return will be more dangerous in some ways than its launch. Even so, getting the two astronauts safely to orbit and then the space station had everyone breathing huge sighs of relief.

As always, Musk was looking ahead.

“This is hopefully the first step on a journey toward a civilization on Mars,” he said Saturday evening.

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.



Source link

SpaceX Dragon docking video: watch the live stream and liftoff replay videos

0

New videos: You can watch the SpaceX Dragon docking video replay below and tune into the live stream where the capsule will be opening its hatch to the ISS soon.

The hatch opening occurs at 12:45pm, roughly two hours after docking with the ISS (International Space Station). The SpaceX Dragon docking with the ISS was a success and happened autonomously, at first with a soft capture, then there were 12 latches around the docking ring that created a pressure-tight seal. An umbilical cord was then deployed to link the SpaceX Dragon and the ISS to share power and data – think of it has a giant USB-C cable in space.



Source link

US astronauts on SpaceX Dragon capsule dock on ISS

According to NASA, SpaceX, along with Boeing, which is also developing rockets, will be able to launch crews to low-Earth orbit, allowing the government agency to focus on deep space missions – with an eye on Mars.

The Dragon capsule was designed to self-dock at the ISS, but the two veteran astronauts were able to assume control if necessary.

After docking, Behnken and Hurley will be stationed on the ISS for a undetermined amount of time, depending on “readiness of the next commercial crew launch,” NASA said.

The Dragon capsule is capable of staying in orbit for at least 210 days, NASA said, and will autonomously undock with the astronauts on board when the mission is complete.

Source by [author_name]

Chrissy Teigen Donates $200,000 to Bail Out George Floyd Protestors

0


Chrissy Teigen Donates $200,000 to Bail Out George Floyd Protestors | InStyle





















this link is to an external site that may or may not meet accessibility guidelines.

Source link