Monday, April 26, 2021

Monday Reading

 

As always, please go to the links for the full articles/ op eds.

Stephen Collinson has one of many takes on President Biden's first 100 days in office, and previews Biden's upcoming speech to Congress:

The increasingly radical presidency of Joe Biden was built on a straightforward foundation: putting Covid-19 shots in arms and stimulus checks in the bank.

"When I took office, I decided that -- it was a fairly basic, simple proposition, and that is I got elected to solve problems," Biden said at his first official news conference in March. "And the most urgent problem facing the American people, I stated from the outset, was Covid-19 and the economic dislocation for millions and millions of Americans."
 
Had Biden stumbled on these key tasks, his emerging, and staggering, multi-trillion dollar aspirations to remake the US economy and much of the social safety net would have appeared not just ambitious but politically inconceivable.
 
But the President can report at the end of his first 100 days in office to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday night that he has successfully embarked on a mission he defined on Inauguration Day to "repair," "restore," "heal" and "build."  [snip]
 
The scale of Biden's spending and the breadth of his ambition suggest he is planning the most sweeping overhaul of the economy to benefit US workers and the less well off in generations, and is seeking to reverse attempts by ex-President Ronald Reagan and his successors to roll back the New Deal and Great Society programs of Democratic Presidents Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson. His speech will be an important step in explaining what this means to the American people, with opposition building inside Washington to his plans to hike corporate taxes and capital gains taxes to pay for it all.

Here's David Lauter's view on the same topic.

If a person needs any more motivation to get vaccinated (more than, say, saving your life or lives of those around you!), how about this:

American tourists who have been fully vaccinated against Covid-19 will be able to visit the European Union over the summer, the head of the bloc’s executive body said in an interview with The New York Times on Sunday, more than a year after shutting down nonessential travel from most countries to limit the spread of the coronavirus.

The fast pace of vaccination in the United States, and advanced talks between authorities there and the European Union over how to make vaccine certificates acceptable as proof of immunity for visitors, will enable the European Commission, the executive branch of the European Union, to recommend a switch in policy that could see trans-Atlantic leisure travel restored.

“The Americans, as far as I can see, use European Medicines Agency-approved vaccines,” Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, said Sunday in an interview with The Times in Brussels. “This will enable free movement and the travel to the European Union.

Freedom to travel.  That seemed like a dream not that long ago. 

Speaking of vaccinations, the "pause" in administering the Johnson & Johnson vaccines seems to be (surprise!) causing a large swath of the public to avoid getting vaccinated at a critical time:

Fewer than 1 in 4 Americans not yet immunized against the coronavirus say they would be willing to get the vaccine made by Johnson & Johnson, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll that finds broad mistrust of the shot’s safety after federal health officials paused its use.

The nationwide survey shows that slightly fewer than half of U.S. adults overall say they consider the Johnson & Johnson vaccine very or somewhat safe after its use was halted this month following reports of rare, severe blood clots. [snip]

Some leading vaccine authorities said the comparatively slender public faith in the Johnson & Johnson shot casts doubt on whether the government’s decision to halt that vaccine was in the best interest of the nation’s health, balancing the dangers of going unvaccinated against the low incidence of the brain blood clots.

“If I hear the phrase ‘abundance of caution’ one more time, I’m going to jump out of my window,” said Paul A. Offit, a vaccine expert at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “In the name of transparency, in the name of openness, we scare people.”

To us, it was something of an unforced error by the FDA, and we're now seeing the results.  Maybe they should have consulted a psychologist or marketing expert before they made the decision to pause.

Some of them may think they'll not fade away, but is time on their side?

Bob Dylan was a comparatively young man of 65 when he recorded his gently swinging “Spirit On the Water” 15 years ago. Now, as his 80th birthday approaches on May 24, he is among a number of rock legends who this year will begin their ninth decade of life and are still going strong.

Some of the others turning 80 this year range from David Crosby and Martha Reeves to guitar great Steve Cropper, Art Garfunkel and Temptations singer Otis Williams, who is the sole surviving original member of that fabled Motown singing group.

“It seems quite plausible to be a musician in your 70s or 80s now,” said Jethro Tull founder Ian Anderson, 73. His 54-year-old band is now completing a new album, its first in 18 years. Jethro Tull’s ninth album, released in 1976, was titled “Too Old to Rock ‘n’ Roll: Too Young to Die.”

“We can continue to be productive and die with our boots on,” Anderson continued, “which is a lot better than being spoon-fed in an old-folks home.”

We didn't watch them, but apparently this year's Oscars were plodding, odd, and ultimately disappointingHere's a list of the "winners."

Please do yourself a favor and head over to Infidel 753's link round-up for his excellent selection of interesting items from around the Internet.  While you're in his neighborhood, check out his essay "A reason for blogging," for a revealing look at his motivations.