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Sunday, October 4, 2020

Ohio governor says Trump’s diagnosis serves as ‘cautionary tale’


Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said Sunday he hoped President Donald Trump's recent Covid-19 diagnosis served as "a cautionary tale" that inspired people to wear masks to help slow down the spread of the virus.

"What I hope is that what we have seen with the president is a cautionary tale for people, and people will understand that, look, it can happen to the president, it can happen to your family, and you wear a mask to help other people," the Republican governor said on CNN's "State of the Union."

The president disclosed that he and first lady Melania Trump tested positive for Covid-19 in a tweet early Friday morning. It is not known where the president contracted the virus, but he was in the state of Ohio last week for rallies, as well as the first presidential debate with former Vice President Joe Biden in Cleveland.

DeWine said Sunday he was not at Tuesday’s debate, but was with the president for several minutes when he flew into both Dayton and Toledo. He said the White House had not reached out to him directly since the president's diagnosis.

But DeWine repeatedly declined to call the president irresponsible for bringing the virus into his state, where many attendees of the rallies were not wearing masks and where there was not social distancing. At the debate, the first family was seen not wearing masks while in the audience.

"Doesn't that upset you? ... You were elected to protect the citizens of Ohio and the president and his team were putting them at risk?" CNN host Jake Tapper said to DeWine.

DeWine responded that the president's team recommended people wear masks at the rallies, and some masks were handed out.

"This is something that we've been dealing with, not only in Ohio, but in this country, is that we have people who don't think that they should be wearing a mask," he said. "And, what we have tried to talk to everyone about is that, if you do wear a mask, you just — you're going to cut down the spread, and you're doing it for other people."

"I'm not resentful," DeWine added.


The governor also said that the president's entry to Walter Reed Military Medical Center early Friday evening was the "right decision."

This "should be kind of an alert to everybody that anybody can get the virus. Even the president of the United States can get the virus, and so we ought to use this, and simply just learn from it," DeWine said.

"So, people who — maybe who have not worn masks in the past, I'm hoping that they will look at this and say, 'Look, the president can get it, I can get it, it can happen to anybody.' And I hope that that's what happens and that's what comes out of this," he added.



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Trump signs a blank piece of paper and Twitter users have questions

The White House wants to give the appearance that Trump is hard at work, despite being hospitalized for coronavirus

The White House is receiving the side-eye after the Trump administration released a photo on Saturday showing a hospitalized President Donald Trump signing his name with a marker to an apparently blank piece of paper.

The administration released photos showing the former reality TV star, who has been at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center outside of the nation’s capital since Friday, hard at work from the hospital’s presidential suite, which is equipped to allow him to continue his official duties.

Ivanka Trump, the president’s senior aide, shared one of the images on her Twitter page, saying: “Nothing can stop him from working for the American people. RELENTLESS!”

Jon Ostrower, the editor-in-chief of an aviation publication, tweeted two separate pictures of the president that showed him working in different rooms. He explained that the pictures were “taken 10 minutes apart at 5:25:59 pm and 5:35:40 pm ET Saturday, according to the EXIF data embedded in both @AP wire postings that were shared by the White House this evening.”

Both tweets drew criticism from social media users as their replies reveal ongoing skepticism about what is being presented to the public about Donald Trump’s condition since testing positive for coronavirus on Thursday.

Read More: Chris Rock on Trump’s coronavirus diagnosis: ‘My heart goes out to COVID’

“Nothing can stop him from a staged photo op,” TV personality Lea Black said in a reaction to Ivanka Trump’s post. 

Scrolling through the replies to Ivanka Trump’s tweet, author Lynn Comella can be found saying

Some of the criticism is being directed at Ivanka’s tweet, with author Lynn Comella writing, “Oh honey. Everyone can tell this is a very sick man propped in a chair for the purpose of staged White House propaganda. Go hug your kids and get off twitter.” 

Ostrower’s tweet prompted many wannabe sleuths on Twitter to conclude that the images had been staged by the White House, with several commenters mocking the president for simply signing a blank piece of paper using a black Sharpie.

READ MORE: Early vote shows signs of Black voters’ shift to mail voting

“Not a huge surprise that these photos are staged – and I’m amused by those pointing out that if you zoom in he’s just signing a blank sheet of paper – but it’s genuinely appalling that he still won’t wear a mask,” historian Alex von Tunzelmann tweeted. “I hope his vanity hasn’t caused the photographer to be infected.”

Trump was flown to the tri-service military medical center in Bethesda, Maryland, on Friday after he and First Lady Melania Trump tested positive for the potentially deadly COVID-19 contagion.

In a televised briefing on Saturday morning, Trump’s doctors said he was “doing very well” and in “exceptionally good spirits,” Newsweek reports. But by Sunday morning, “staged” was trending on Twitter in response to #SharpieGate. 

Trump’s reelection campaign said it was putting all events featuring the president and members of his family on hold, but that Pence would resume campaigning since he tested negative.

Trump was last seen by reporters returning to the White House on Thursday evening and did not appear ill. He is 74 years old and clinically obese, putting him at higher risk of serious complications from a virus that has infected more than 7 million people nationwide.

As of Sunday morning, there were more than 209,000 U.S. deaths connected to the coronavirus, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

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Grand Jury Audio in Breonna Taylor Case Proves LMPD and Witnesses Had Different Stories, but Omits Daniel Cameron's Recommendations to Jurors

At the behest of a juror involved in grand jury proceedings into the killing of Breonna Taylor by officers from the Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD), Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron on Friday delivered recordings of the deliberations, which show there were in fact conflicting stories between the…

Read more...



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Trump campaign adviser spars with Chris Wallace over debate


A senior campaign adviser to President Donald Trump accused "Fox News Sunday" host Chris Wallace of not being a neutral moderator during last week's presidential debate.

"He had to debate not just Joe Biden, but you as well. You were not a neutral moderator then," said Steve Cortes, a senior adviser for the Trump campaign, on Sunday.

In a back-and-forth on "Fox News Sunday" over the first family and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows‘ decision to not wear masks during the debate, Wallace said the rules from the Cleveland Clinic "could not have been more clear" that everyone in the audience had to wear a mask.

Cortes responded that everyone was tested for Covid-19 prior to the event — to which Wallace reiterated that the Cleveland Clinic's rule was that everyone had to wear a mask, as well as being tested.

"Chris, we believe that masks are very useful, the president has worn them on many occasions, including visiting the hospital where he is now a patient, [and] when he was visiting as commander-in-chief as a guest to visit soldiers there, he wore a mask. So we believe in masks," Cortes said. "We also believe in some element of individual choice."

"They weren't distanced and there were rules, and there was no freedom of choice. They broke the rules," Wallace responded.


"The way you're starting to harangue me now actually reminds me of what you did to the president during that debate on Tuesday night," Cortes shot back.

"I don't mind tough questions, I welcome reasonably tough questions. But what I don't think is OK is for you to become the effective opposition to the president. OK?" Cortes added.

"Steve, let me simply say the president interrupted me and the vice president 145 times, so I object to saying I harangued the president. I know it's the talking point," Wallace said in response.

Cortes also said Sunday that the Trump campaign will continue while the president is recovering from the coronavirus. Vice President Mike Pence will proceed with his schedule, including a vice presidential debate this week, he added.

"We think it's important our campaign vigorously proceed," Cortes said. "Look, the MAGA movement is bigger than just President Trump, he's instrumental of course, but is not the only key element of the MAGA movement."

He added that the vice president, campaign staff and millions of Americans "need to step up and to some degree fill the void that is left because our champion, our main instrument, is not able at this moment to vigorously campaign and certainly not campaign physically right now at all."

"The United States thankfully has vigorous structures for chain of command and there will be no disruption there," Cortes added.

Later on "Fox News Sunday," Tom Inglesby, the director of Johns Hopkins University's Center for Health Security, said there was a "clear danger" in holding events with many people in close proximity, without wearing masks for a long period of time, "especially where loud voices are used."

"I really think large gatherings like rallies shouldn't be happening at this point for any purpose during a pandemic, which is, in the last few weeks, actually been getting worse," Inglesby said.



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Chris Rock on Trump’s coronavirus diagnosis: ‘My heart goes out to COVID’

In kicking off the latest season of ‘Saturday Night Live,’ Chris Rock took aim at the structure of American government

Comedian Chris Rock kicked off the Season 46 premiere of “Saturday Night Live” and wasted no time mocking President Donald Trump‘s coronavirus diagnosis.

The former SNL cast member is the first to host the longtime sketch comedy series live in-person since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in March. During his opening monologue, Rock kicked off by addressing the “elephant in the room.”

“President Trump is in the hospital from COVID, I just want to say my heart goes out to COVID,” the Fargo actor said, USA Today reports.

The president was taken to Walter Reed Hospital on Friday after he and First Lady Melania Trump tested positive for the potentially deadly contagion. 

Rock joked about the safety protocols on the SNL set involving nasal COVID-19 tests. 

Read More: Chris Rock jokes Tiffany Haddish cut off her hair after taking mushroom tea

“I haven’t had so much stuff up my nose since I shared a dressing room with Chris Farley,” he said. Farley died in 1997 of a reported drug overdose at the age of 33.

He and Rock were SNL cast members together in the early 90s.

 “I think we need to renegotiate our relationship to the government,” Rock said during his opening monologue. “Does it work? I think Joe Biden should be the last president ever. We need a whole new system, OK? … What job do you have for four years, no matter what?” 

The comedian, in calling for term limits, noted that Americans “agreed” to “not have kings, yet we have dukes and duchesses running the Senate and the Congress, making decisions for poor people,” he said.

“Rich people making decisions for poor people — that’s like your handsome friend giving you dating advice,” Rock added. 

“Everything going on right now, we can lick this — we can beat this — if we face it together,” he continued before ending his monologue with a quote from writer James Baldwin: “Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it’s faced.”

Read More: Megan Thee Stallion makes a statement during her solo SNL debut

theGRIO previously reported, Megan Thee Stallion made her SNL solo debut as the musical guest, performing her songs “Savage” and “Don’t Stop.”

The “Wap” rapper made a powerful statement about protecting Black women and men, and took aim at Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron over his handling of the Breonna Taylor case.

The message “Daniel Cameron is no different than the sellout negroes that sold our people into slavery” flashed on the screen behind the hip-hop star. 

“We need to protect our Black women and love our Black women … because at the end of the day we need our Black women,” Megan said during the performance.

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The post Chris Rock on Trump’s coronavirus diagnosis: ‘My heart goes out to COVID’ appeared first on TheGrio.



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