I bet he just used the coronavirus as an excuse. Trump has no interest in helping other countries. He’s not even interested in helping all Americans. He only cares about his cult.
https://twitter.com/justinhendrix/status/1241082107147030534?s=21
I bet he just used the coronavirus as an excuse. Trump has no interest in helping other countries. He’s not even interested in helping all Americans. He only cares about his cult.
In other times, the firing of the entire peace corps— with no benefits, no place for them to shelter, no protection at all- would have been a national scandal. Now it’ll barely register on this crazy Friday.
— Jeff Greenfield (@greenfield64) March 21, 2020
Typical for the @SecPompeo: ALL current Peace Corps volunteers to be immediately evacuated and fired. Directed to self-quarrantine (e.g. not go to parents' homes) but State provides no assistance once they are off the plane. Don't qualify for unemployment. https://t.co/Yf1dmHHGPq
— David Burbach (@dburbach) March 20, 2020
https://twitter.com/justinhendrix/status/1241082107147030534?s=21
It is such a failure of imagination that the Trump Administration can’t think of something constructive for 7000 talented public servants to do in the middle of a public health crisis.
— Dan Pfeiffer (@danpfeiffer) March 22, 2020
Firing them is so painfully stupid. It’s all hands on deck time https://t.co/jTePYcfy31
. @SpeakerPelosi We need a press conference with every member who was a Peace Corps volunteer— starting with @donnashalala — to point out the utter destructive outrage that Trump has recalled all Peace Corps volunteers and fired them. This is simply criminal.
— Norman Ornstein (@NormOrnstein) March 22, 2020
His negligence will kill people and damage the economy.
This isn't only about propaganda. Trump's own advisers told him not to trust that Xi Jingping was giving him an honest picture of the virus in China, at a critical moment when the U.S. could have been mobilizing defenses more quickly. https://t.co/13LKga2yhe pic.twitter.com/bHhRiHCTvC
— Shane Harris (@shaneharris) March 30, 2020
“But Trump’s aides were told to expect a potential pandemic…” https://t.co/ULAxrEd5c9
— Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) March 26, 2020
New: U.S. intelligence reports from January and February warned about a likely pandemic. https://t.co/sx2dy0l3nM by me, @gregpmiller, @jdawsey1, @nakashimae, @yabutaleb7
— Shane Harris (@shaneharris) March 21, 2020
This story is chilling. https://t.co/3GnWMIRZDI
— Helen Branswell (@HelenBranswell) March 20, 2020
Uh…were the sources of these "classified warnings" about coronavirus the multitude of videos showing mass devastation in China and beyond?! Or the many warnings from medics?! There was tons of reporting. We all knew. On @gaslitnation we did our first corona special in January! https://t.co/H3VViC7TZW
— Sarah Kendzior (@sarahkendzior) March 21, 2020
From February, Democrats tried to get republicans to care https://t.co/Auyp1X8nE6
— Molly Jong-Fast🏡 (@MollyJongFast) March 21, 2020
President Donald Trump ignored reports from US intelligence agencies starting in January that warned of the scale and intensity of the coronavirus outbreak in China, The Washington Post reported Friday. https://t.co/ue7QJOvPrV
— CNN (@CNN) March 21, 2020
As the outbreak spread, Trump ignored warnings from:
— Robert Reich (@RBReich) March 21, 2020
HHS
CDC
CIA
DNI
WHO
It took an intervention from Tucker Carlson for him to take the crisis seriously.
“Ford’s timeline suggested that if the administration had reacted to the acute shortage of ventilators in February, the joint effort between Ford and General Electric might have produced lifesaving equipment sometime in mid- to late April” https://t.co/mnuTJbvPEQ
— Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) March 25, 2020
The Plain Dealer had 340 reporters just two decades ago. A headline for our age. pic.twitter.com/TIkeIZENKZ
— Tyler Buchanan (@Tylerjoelb) April 12, 2020
1/ I am struggling for the words. After laying off more than 20 journalists last week — in the middle of this pandemic — this is what The Plain Dealer is doing to the remaining Guild members. https://t.co/U7vNXgkKzR
— Connie Schultz (@ConnieSchultz) April 7, 2020
We cut everybody's salary @dallasnews today. I hate that we had to do it, but I'm grateful that our company found ways to share the burden and invest in the future. Damn, I love these journalists. They'll never stop fighting and I won't either.https://t.co/hN0N9nVdMh
— Just Another Mike Wilson (@mWilstory) April 6, 2020
Support your local newspaper by subscribing to it.
Especially right now, journalists are essential workers. But their jobs are threatened by the very crisis they are covering. Urgent help is needed, and some ideas are offered here. My column: https://t.co/odlFcuI23H
— Margaret Sullivan (@Sulliview) March 26, 2020
Two devastating bulletins today from the US news business:
— Bill Grueskin (@BGrueskin) March 30, 2020
— The Tampa Bay Times, a top-ranked metro paper, is going down to 2 days in print
— Gannett, owner of USA Today and > 200 other dailies, is furloughing most of its staff one week per month.https://t.co/2WUJGAm9Lm
Journalists have been designated as "essential workers" but the industry as a whole is teetering on the brink of wholesale collapse — in months, not years. https://t.co/2EdgNdAyZB
— T. Christian Miller (@txtianmiller) March 26, 2020
“Among the important steps you should take during this crisis: Wash your hands. Don’t touch your face. And buy a subscription to your local newspaper.” https://t.co/NvItvdunIH
— Luke Broadwater☀️ (@lukebroadwater) March 27, 2020
“We wrote about the local bands, and businesses, and that’s who we depended on for revenue”
— Néné (@abene_writes) March 20, 2020
Dozens of local papers have stopped publication, or had mass layoffs because coronavirus regulations have shut down their advertisers. My latest for @GuardianUS https://t.co/XizakDVK2H
At the Cleveland Plain Dealer, new staff cuts may slice the number of reporters to a shockingly low 14. The newsroom staff (reporters, editors, etc) was more than 300 in the 1990s. My column https://t.co/SKQIG89pTe
— Margaret Sullivan (@Sulliview) March 15, 2020
Consider this my gift to the world:
— Joshua Benton (@jbenton) March 3, 2020
Here are the daily/Sunday circulations of the largest newspapers in the United States — information that is surprisingly difficult to find online!
These are all the papers with daily circulation of at least 75,000: pic.twitter.com/G0WbQiIYTP
The shrinking presence of local news may be dividing the country, Miami Herald reporter Julie K. Brown says, just days after the Herald's owner, McClatchy, filed for bankruptcy, throwing the future of her paper and 29 others across the US into question. https://t.co/fvZVRZjH63
— CNN Business (@CNNBusiness) February 18, 2020
.@Kdoctor says on @ReliableSources that financial investors are soon expected to own 40% of daily newspapers in the U.S. And, he adds, "There are only 20,000 journalists left at daily newspapers," a decrease of 60% in the last 25 years. This is a growing crisis for democracy.
— Alan C. Miller (@alanmillerNLP) February 16, 2020
The future of local newspapers just got bleaker. Here’s why we can’t let them die. – The Washington Post ..the great @Sulliview on similar themes https://t.co/PoRxg2J9Fc
— emily bell (@emilybell) February 15, 2020
Way late to this, but it may be even worse than @jbenton points out here. If you take the newsroom headcount at the @nytimes (approx. 1,700), @washingtonpost (approx. 850), and @WSJ (1,000? 1,200?), these three papers employ nearly 1 of every 5 newspaper journalists left in U.S. https://t.co/6cfjPCXwaK
— Paul Farhi (@farhip) February 10, 2020
The contributors to this piece are laid off local journalists. The photographs of them were taken by laid off photographers. Who better to tell the story about the decline in local news. https://t.co/UflwI9MmoY
— Marc Lacey (@marclacey) December 21, 2019
“My routine as a kid was pretty simple. I’d wake up, grab the Cleveland Plain Dealer…I loved the Plain Dealer, but sadly the Plain Dealer is being murdered.”@JRagazzo on the methodical murder of a paper we grew up reading and dreamed of one day joining https://t.co/5GhleeZr4k
— Wesley (@WesleyLowery) April 7, 2020
Where are the rats going to go?
Coronavirus Closings: Baltimore Public Markets, Lexington Market Closing Thursday Evening https://t.co/zNwwBlEhjb pic.twitter.com/SSQ11BZeAB
— WJZ | CBS Baltimore (@wjz) March 20, 2020
If he’s as rich as he says he is, we shouldn’t bail him out. Mar-a-Lago should have closed much earlier when they found that people who had been there had coronavirus.
The Trump Organization has laid off or furloughed more than 2,500 people as the coronavirus outbreak has led to extended closures at most of President Trump’s hotels and resorts https://t.co/mbCspwFpXt
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) April 15, 2020
Trump Org dumps 1,500 workers and skips rent payments amid coronavirus https://t.co/mc15M2rpXB
— Don Winslow (@donwinslow) April 5, 2020
Trump’s real estate company reportedly talked with @DeutscheBank about postponing payments because of the economic crisis. The public has a right to know if the Trump family is getting special favors & if that influences the President’s financial policies. https://t.co/8bc6rFLm0x
— Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) April 7, 2020
NEW: @realdonaldtrump’s company has let go 1,500 employees, turned down the lights to save on electricity, and inquired about delaying payments due this month. The latest on their troubles: https://t.co/0WvaHxalmY
— David Fahrenthold (@Fahrenthold) April 4, 2020
The coronavirus outbreak is costing Trump Organization properties more than a million dollars in lost revenue daily and may have hurt the firm’s chances of earning a record price on the sale of its Washington hotel. https://t.co/ljiMuIdmAE
— Rebecca Ballhaus (@rebeccaballhaus) April 3, 2020
Trump’s Company Seeks to Ease Financial Crunch as Coronavirus Takes Toll https://t.co/5Q58sYeljI Really? I mean, really?
— Terry McMillan (@MsTerryMcMillan) April 2, 2020
The Trump Organization has reportedly asked about delaying payments to loans and other financial obligations after the coronavirus pandemic closed most of its resorts, hotels, and golf courses https://t.co/hEiifdyOPj
— The Daily Beast (@thedailybeast) April 2, 2020
NEW: What happened before @realdonaldtrump called for re-evaluating lockdowns? His company had to close 6 of its top 7 revenue-generating clubs and hotels.https://t.co/KdxodfguO5
— David Fahrenthold (@Fahrenthold) March 23, 2020
NEW: @realdonaldtrump’s business shutters properties, lays off staff, as coronavirus slams its hotels and clubs. https://t.co/tfapbNudvb
— David Fahrenthold (@Fahrenthold) March 20, 2020
President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort has closed its doors https://t.co/2uQDzxXT16
— The Daily Beast (@thedailybeast) March 20, 2020
President Trump owns and profits from 11 hotels and 16 golf resorts.
— Citizens for Ethics (@CREWcrew) March 20, 2020
If his administration gives a bailout to the hotel industry, it will be a bailout for Trump.https://t.co/pA2QNTlesF
In recent days, the Trump Organization cut staff from hotels in New York and DC, closed Mar-a-Lago, halted new reservations at a Las Vegas hotel and closed golf courses in Los Angeles and Miami @EricLiptonNYT @SteveEder @benprotess https://t.co/ELuqMm9Ku0
— Danielle Ivory (@danielle_ivory) March 21, 2020
Trump’s like “F*ck, I knew I should have brought my coke stash back to DC” @realDonaldTrump
— NoelCaslerComedy (@CaslerNoel) March 20, 2020
Coronavirus: Trump forced to shut down Mar-a-Lago amid outbreak – Business Insider https://t.co/7GkYYLNmZi
Trump's businesses had been struggling long before the pandemichttps://t.co/pA2QNTlesF
— Citizens for Ethics (@CREWcrew) March 22, 2020
Let's not forget Trump's real estate holdings are in trouble. So are Jared's. What are the lives of millions of people compared to Trump making money? https://t.co/ezpWANwc9d https://t.co/wHolBtljKe https://t.co/F27f0LtgNv
— Craig Unger (@craigunger) March 24, 2020
Trump asks Deutsche Bank for a break on his loan payments. https://t.co/a8ig93chtq
— Mother Jones (@MotherJones) April 2, 2020
No bailouts for ships registered in other countries to avoid US taxes
No bailouts for companies unless they are required not to do stock buybacks or have excessive executive pay
No bailouts for companies that don’t pay fair wages
Worker must be helped first. Companies already got a big gift with the Trump tax cut. They spent it on buybacks instead of a rainy day fund. That’s not my fault or problem.
Sure, we’re going to have to help some companies to prevent industries from going under and jobs and services from being lost. However, let’s not let them use us to benefit their shareholders and executives. If Trump’s businesses get bailout money, we need to know.
Stopping taxpayer bailout money from going to stock buybacks or executive bonuses isn't rocket science. We just have to make it a requirement for all big businesses receiving federal money. And I've got a full list of terms for that. https://t.co/cPjVMNoN3R
— Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) March 19, 2020
On July 15, 2019, your board of directors authorized $3B in buybacks. Please sit down. https://t.co/6s9BTw8ZZh
— Katie Porter (@katieporteroc) March 20, 2020
Airline CEO pay
— rafael (@rafaelshimunov) March 18, 2020
Delta: $15M
American: $12M
United: $10M
SouthWest: $8M
Alaska: $4M
Now they're asking for a bail out that is almost equal to the value of every airline combined.
If we're going to pay for it, we keep it.
Nationalize the airlines.
A lot of companies are lining up for bailouts right now. CEO-to-worker compensation in America is, conservatively, about 220:1 (higher, if you measure it different ways). This is the moment to start fixing this uniquely American outrageous statistic.
— Ali Velshi (@AliVelshi) March 18, 2020
One of the reasons industries are so short on cash right now is that they have spent billions buying back their own stocks instead of investing in their workers and saving for a rainy day.
— Chuck Schumer (@SenSchumer) March 18, 2020
That needs to be addressed NOW.
Holy shit, Boeing spent *$43 billion* on stock buybacks, helping more than double its stock price in 2017-2018, enriching shareholders, only to meltdown from its mass produced faulty planes and the current coronavirus crisis. Now they need a bailout? https://t.co/q0obrCrWki
— Lee Fang (@lhfang) March 18, 2020
The Trump tax cut was a hippo size windfall for the airline industry. Southwest alone reported a $1.4 BILLION benefit. Workers got a sliver. Stock buybacks made rich investors even richer.
— Chris Murphy (@ChrisMurphyCT) March 18, 2020
Remember that when the airlines come asking for a no-strings-attached bailout.
Trump is speaking to US airline executives this morning. They want a $50bn bailout in spite of spending more than $9 out of $10 in free cash flow on share buybacks in last decade. @djrothkopf on why many strings should be attached to protect employees. https://t.co/vXJbM51MXE
— Edward Luce (@EdwardGLuce) March 18, 2020
We don't want bailouts unless they're used for workers, unless the industries keep all their employees, unless they don't cut salaries of their employees, and unless they are not allowed to buy back their own stocks or raise corporate salaries. #WorkersFirst
— Chuck Schumer (@SenSchumer) March 19, 2020
We don't need a "stimulus" package. We don't need bailouts of airlines, casinos, and hotels. We don't need more corporate tax cuts.
— Robert Reich (@RBReich) March 19, 2020
We need everyone home and safe, with enough money to pay their bills and see a doctor if necessary.
Health is more important than the economy.
State of play on emergency aid/"bailouts" for big firms:
— Jeffrey Stein (@JStein_WaPo) March 20, 2020
– WH & GOP want $50B 4 airlines
– They also want $150B for other hard hit industries
– WH has said it wants to help hotels & cruises
– Treasury would get authority to decide where the $150B goeshttps://t.co/jouGWUQbp9
Corporate America:
— Sven Henrich (@NorthmanTrader) March 20, 2020
2009-2019: Cheapest money cycle in history
2017: Biggest corporate tax cut in history
2018: Record corporate profits
2019: Flat earnings growth
March 2020: Government bailouts please.
Many of the industries that are or will be seeking bailouts have been major donors to the president’s campaign. https://t.co/FawYqFHSUf
— Citizens for Ethics (@CREWcrew) March 19, 2020
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis took a dig at the president in an MSNBC interview this week, saying he doesn’t support corporate bailouts because “I’m not a socialist like Donald Trump.” https://t.co/C03yhPONwz
— The Denver Post (@denverpost) March 20, 2020
NO justification for bailouts or subsidies to corporations. They can get low-interest loans or reorganize their debts in bankruptcy.
— Robert Reich (@RBReich) March 19, 2020
They got $1 trillion+ from Trump's tax cut & used it to buy back their shares of stock.
No more corporate welfare. Help people, not corporations.
The 500 biggest corporations spent 50% of available cash flow on buybacks in the past decade, which enriched execs, per @business
— Dan Price (@DanPriceSeattle) March 20, 2020
Regular people would be punished for frivolous spending and poor "financial literacy." But companies are being rewarded with tax breaks and bailouts
On July 15, 2019, your board of directors authorized $3B in buybacks. Please sit down. https://t.co/6s9BTw8ZZh
— Katie Porter (@katieporteroc) March 20, 2020
Gonna reiterate that the big cruise ship companies, all actually based in Miami, locate their tax residence in Panama, Liberia, and the Bahamas and thereby avoid U.S. tax. It would be insane to bail them out without making them repatriate. https://t.co/jHbO93l7qt https://t.co/DUuYOmPOeG
— Seth Hanlon (@SethHanlon) March 20, 2020
As a former secretary of labor, I can tell you that the airlines don't deserve a $50 billion bailout.⁰ In the last 10 years, they spent 96% of their cash flow to buy back shares of their own stock in order to boost executive bonuses.
— Robert Reich (@RBReich) March 21, 2020
They shouldn't see a dime of taxpayer money.
All the major cruise lines are asking for bailouts from the U.S. Government.
— Sabrina McDaniel (@Sabrina_McDa) March 22, 2020
Yet, Disney Cruises sails under the Bahamian flag … Celebrity Cruises under Liberian/Maltese flags & Carnival Cruises under the Panamanian flag – all to avoid U.S. taxes & employment law
Just sayin'
If he’s going to lie or exaggerate, why show him without simultaneous corrections? Why show lies and bigotry at all?
The media’s live broadcasts of #Trump’s rallies (presented as #COVID19 briefings) are dangerous political ads that help spread disinformation. In 2016, it was irresponsible willful ignorance. Having the benefit of hindsight, hard to see this as anything other than intentional.
— @tiffanydcross (@TiffanyDCross) March 27, 2020
By carrying Trump’s briefings live, TV networks are making an affirmative choice to use their airwaves to broadcast misinformation to millions of people during a pandemic. This is a deeply irresponsible choice. By making it, they are probably contributing to the loss of life. pic.twitter.com/PoH4iHmX29
— Adam Jentleson 🎈 (@AJentleson) March 27, 2020
Daily White House briefings are back, to huge TV ratings. But news divisions are having internal debates about covering them live, @grynbaum reports, and Ted Koppel is not a fan. https://t.co/1w0t0yimkO
— Jim Windolf (@jimwindolf) March 25, 2020
Trump’s daily “briefings” on Coronavirus have become regularly scheduled television but they don’t offer real information and cable news should stop airing them. https://t.co/XNN2wnAjZS
— Matthew Yglesias (@mattyglesias) March 23, 2020
Good. We’re in the middle of a public health crisis, and lives depend on receiving accurate information from our public officials. https://t.co/jaFq1aZRWD
— Jon Favreau (@jonfavs) March 25, 2020
The media must stop live-broadcasting Trump’s dangerous, destructive coronavirus briefings. My column https://t.co/nIs5L051zq
— Margaret Sullivan (@Sulliview) March 21, 2020
Media people who have said (directly or by implication), pls stop live coverage of these rallies-disguised-as-briefings:@jayrosen_nyu @Sulliview @jason_pontin @JenSeniorNY @maddow @Lawrence
— James Fallows (@JamesFallows) March 21, 2020
Me @JamesFallows
I know there are more. Pls add names and links in replies. https://t.co/VanxbSEJvB
At a time when misinformation could kill large numbers of people, don’t provide live broadcasts of the most prolific liar in American political history. Go to the events, pause, then explain accurate information to the public, and only mention what Trump said with factual context https://t.co/hJAGmq6pCT
— Brian Klaas (@brianklaas) March 21, 2020
—@AlexKoppelman on showing Trump's coronavirus press conferences live: "The situation we’re currently in… is that there is a very real possibility that in broadcasting these press conferences live… we are actively misinforming our audiences." https://t.co/5hmM9pyqu0 pic.twitter.com/q5umV9RUDx
— Oliver Darcy (@oliverdarcy) March 21, 2020
You don’t need to air the president lying live.
— Matthew Yglesias (@mattyglesias) March 20, 2020
You can watch what he says, and then run an accurate report about what happened.
If a network provides real-time fact checking to these news conferences their ratings will rise.
— Brian Schatz (@brianschatz) March 20, 2020
They are vehicles for dangerous disinformation and for the president*’s re-election campaign. https://t.co/22805mvDJU
— Charles P. Pierce (@CharlesPPierce) March 20, 2020
It’s time for the media to stop airing these propaganda rallies masquerading as press conferences. Let him have them. Record them. And then fact-check them BEFORE airing them. Offer viewers who desperately wants facts and truth the accurate context! https://t.co/8v4Pq1A568
— Kurt Bardella (@kurtbardella) March 20, 2020
Smart, true column. https://t.co/J4rbU6uczI
— Paul Goldberger (@paulgoldberger) March 21, 2020
Maddow: If Trump is going to keep lying like he has been every day on stuff this important, we should, all of us, stop broadcasting it. Honestly, it's going to cost lives. pic.twitter.com/tMvyrE3YTK
— Maddow Blog (@MaddowBlog) March 21, 2020
The best option Is to stop allowing these sham press conferences that are actually political rallies. No live broadcasts. Direct questions only to the experts. If Trump muscles in to grab the attention, make sure that the same question is repeated to the experts.
— Norman Ornstein (@NormOrnstein) March 21, 2020
Morning #TeamJustice. I’m torn between thinking the media should not carry these “Trump rally” moments live – just tape them then broadcast only what Dr. Fauci says – OR broadcast every moment of Trump’s ugliness so we see just how incompetent he is to handle this crisis. https://t.co/2b6p124uvC
— Glenn Kirschner (@glennkirschner2) March 21, 2020
Reported US coronavirus cases and deaths via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 27, 2020
4 weeks ago: 60 cases, 0 deaths
3 weeks ago: 227 cases, 12 deaths
2 weeks ago: 1,636 cases, 41 deaths
1 week ago: 13,229 cases, 195 deaths
Right now: 82,135 cases, 1,195 deaths
Total reported US coronavirus deaths via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 27, 2020
3/1: 2
3/2: 6
3/3: 9
3/4: 11
3/5: 12
3/6: 17
3/7: 19
3/8: 21
3/9: 26
3/10: 31
3/11: 38
3/12: 41
3/13: 49
3/14: 58
3/15: 65
3/16: 87
3/17: 111
3/18: 149
3/19: 195
3/20: 263
3/21: 323
3/22: 413
3/23: 541
3/24: 704
3/25: 938
Now: 1,195
Here's a weekly look at U.S. coronavirus cases that @CNN has tracked. Right now, there are 78,300 confirmed cases & 1,135 deaths. On March 19, there were 8,898 cases & 149 deaths. On March 12, there were 1,274 cases & 38 deaths. On March 5, there were 161 cases & 11 deaths.
— Wolf Blitzer (@wolfblitzer) March 26, 2020
Relevant as U.S. death toll hits four digits: by my calc, counties that voted for Trump in 2016 account for 45% of the U.S. population but so far just 19% of all U.S. #COVID19 deaths, per JHU data.
— Dave Wasserman (@Redistrict) March 26, 2020
CNN tally: As of this moment, there are at least 74,071 cases of the novel coronavirus in the United States. 1,067 people have died. https://t.co/IRnPqrJWJr
— Manu Raju (@mkraju) March 26, 2020
Here's another interesting comparison. Yesterday, detected cases increased by 31% in Trump states as compared to 21% in Clinton states. https://t.co/IwPxTfnoeB
— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) March 26, 2020
Increase over yesterday in detected coronavirus cases. Hopefully, grouping things by region helps even out disparities in testing rates.
— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) March 25, 2020
South: +32%
Northeast (excluding NY): +30%
Midwest: +27%
West (excluding CA & WA): +23%
New York: +20%
California: +20%
Washington: +11%
BREAKING: As the Senate debated a $2 trillion coronavirus relief deal, Johns Hopkins data just in shows the death toll surpassed 1,000 and the number of U.S. cases rose in a single day by 12,000https://t.co/H8OWoXoWIC
— Axios (@axios) March 26, 2020
Per NYC officials, the number of COVID-19 deaths jumped from 199 deaths at 10 am today to 280 at 6 pm.
— Jonathan Lemire (@JonLemire) March 26, 2020
According to CNN Health’s tally of US cases that are detected and tested in the United States through US public health systems, there are at least 65, 033 cases of the novel coronavirus in the United States.
— Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) March 25, 2020
921 people have died.
Reported US coronavirus cases in the last week via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 25, 2020
Thursday, 6 p.m: 11,639 cases
Friday, 6 p.m: 17,757 cases
Saturday, 6 p.m: 22,782 cases
Sunday, 6 p.m: 31,289 cases
Monday, 6 p.m: 42,229 cases
Yesterday, 6 p.m: 52,381 cases
Today, 6 p.m: 64,202 cases
Total US coronavirus cases:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 25, 2020
3/1: 89
3/2: 105
3/3: 125
3/4: 159
3/5: 227
3/6: 331
3/7: 444
3/8: 564
3/9: 728
3/10: 1000
3/11: 1267
3/12: 1645
3/13: 2204
3/14: 2826
3/15: 3505
3/16: 4466
3/17: 6135
3/18: 8760
3/19: 13229
3/20: 18763
3/21: 25740
3/22: 34276
3/23: 42663
Now: 52976
Total US coronavirus deaths via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 25, 2020
3/1: 2
3/2: 6
3/3: 9
3/4: 11
3/5: 12
3/6: 17
3/7: 19
3/8: 21
3/9: 26
3/10: 31
3/11: 38
3/12: 41
3/13: 49
3/14: 58
3/15: 65
3/16: 87
3/17: 111
3/18: 149
3/19: 195
3/20: 263
3/21: 323
3/22: 413
3/23: 541
Now: 704
US coronavirus deaths via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 25, 2020
100 deaths: March 17, 4 p.m.
200 deaths: March 20, 12 p.m.
300 deaths: Saturday, 8 p.m.
400 deaths: Sunday, 6 p.m.
500 deaths: Yesterday, 3 p.m.
600 deaths: Today, 12 p.m.
700 deaths: Today, 8 p.m.
Total US coronavirus deaths in March via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 24, 2020
3/1: 2
3/2: 6
3/3: 9
3/4: 11
3/5: 12
3/6: 17
3/7: 19
3/8: 21
3/9: 26
3/10: 31
3/11: 38
3/12: 41
3/13: 49
3/14: 58
3/15: 65
3/16: 87
3/17: 111
3/18: 149
3/19: 195
3/20: 263
3/21: 323
3/22: 413
Now: 541
Reported US coronavirus cases via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 23, 2020
3/1: 89
3/2: 105
3/3: 125
3/4: 159
3/5: 227
3/6: 331
3/7: 444
3/8: 564
3/9: 728
3/10: 1,000
3/11: 1,267
3/12: 1,645
3/13: 2,204
3/14: 2,826
3/15: 3,505
3/16: 4,466
3/17: 6,135
3/18: 8,760
3/19: 13,229
3/20: 18,763
3/21: 25,740
Now: 32,502
Total US coronavirus deaths via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 23, 2020
3 weeks ago: 2
2 weeks ago: 21
1 week ago: 65
Right now: 410
Total US coronavirus deaths via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 22, 2020
3 weeks ago: 1
2 weeks ago: 19
1 week ago: 58
Right now: 323
Reported US coronavirus cases in March via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 22, 2020
3/1: 89
3/2: 105
3/3: 125
3/4: 159
3/5: 227
3/6: 331
3/7: 444
3/8: 564
3/9: 728
3/10: 1,000
3/11: 1,267
3/12: 1,645
3/13: 2,204
3/14: 2,826
3/15: 3,505
3/16: 4,466
3/17: 6,135
3/18: 8,760
3/19: 13,229
3/20: 18,763
Now: 23,649
Total US coronavirus deaths in March via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 21, 2020
3/1: 2
3/2: 6
3/3: 9
3/4: 11
3/5: 12
3/6: 17
3/7: 19
3/8: 21
3/9: 26
3/10: 31
3/11: 38
3/12: 41
3/13: 49
3/14: 58
3/15: 65
3/16: 87
3/17: 111
3/18: 149
3/19: 195
Now: 242
Reported US coronavirus cases in March via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 21, 2020
3/1: 89
3/2: 105
3/3: 125
3/4: 159
3/5: 227
3/6: 331
3/7: 444
3/8: 564
3/9: 728
3/10: 1,000
3/11: 1,267
3/12: 1,645
3/13: 2,204
3/14: 2,826
3/15: 3,505
3/16: 4,466
3/17: 6,135
3/18: 8,760
3/19: 13,229
Now: 18,182
Reported US coronavirus cases and deaths via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 21, 2020
3 weeks ago: 64 cases, 0 deaths
2 weeks ago: 304 cases, 15 deaths
1 week ago: 2,204 cases, 49 deaths
Yesterday: 13,229 cases, 195 deaths
Right now: 18,182 cases, 242 deaths
Total US coronavirus deaths in March via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 20, 2020
3/1: 2
3/2: 6
3/3: 9
3/4: 11
3/5: 12
3/6: 17
3/7: 19
3/8: 21
3/9: 26
3/10: 31
3/11: 38
3/12: 41
3/13: 49
3/14: 58
3/15: 65
3/16: 87
3/17: 111
3/18: 149
Now: 195
David Crosby Will Rate Your Joint #DavidCrosby @thedavidcrosby #Marijuana https://t.co/30kU8CcVbT via @RollingStone
— Tracy C (@TheTraceC) March 17, 2020
Reported US coronavirus cases in March via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 19, 2020
3/1: 89
3/2: 105
3/3: 125
3/4: 159
3/5: 227
3/6: 331
3/7: 444
3/8: 564
3/9: 728
3/10: 1,000
3/11: 1,267
3/12: 1,645
3/13: 2,204
3/14: 2,826
3/15: 3,505
3/16: 4,466
3/17: 6,135
Now: 8,760
Total US coronavirus deaths in March via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 19, 2020
3/1: 2
3/2: 6
3/3: 9
3/4: 11
3/5: 12
3/6: 17
3/7: 19
3/8: 21
3/9: 26
3/10: 31
3/11: 38
3/12: 41
3/13: 49
3/14: 58
3/15: 65
3/16: 87
3/17: 111
Now: 149
Reported coronavirus cases via @CNN:
— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) March 19, 2020
3 weeks ago: 60 cases
2 weeks ago: 159 cases
1 week ago: 1,272 cases
Right now: 8,898 cases
Confirmed coronavirus cases in New York
— Simon Hedlin (@simonhedlin) March 20, 2020
3/1: 1
3/2: 1
3/3: 2
3/4: 11
3/5: 22
3/6: 44
3/7: 89
3/8: 105
3/9: 142
3/10: 173
3/11: 216
3/12: 328
3/13: 421
3/14: 613
3/15: 729
3/16: 950
3/17: 1,374
3/18: 2,382
3/19: 4,152
3/20: 7,102
Virtual museums and a grim article on real museums
This link to a dozen museums you can visit virtually is now in our TikTok bio as well https://t.co/I3kLxYi5lk pic.twitter.com/QovMhElq2q
— Dave Jorgenson 💡 (@davejorgenson) March 18, 2020
Holy cats. "1/3 of #museums surveyed in the US were operating in the red or close to it before COVID; 3/4 have now closed and 1/3 will not reopen if the crisis continues." https://t.co/Purw8Df35D
— Michelle Moon (@MichelleNMoon) March 18, 2020
Have been talking to Trump supporters today. They say he has done the best he could with the information he had.
I do not believe they have read stories like these:https://t.co/Efn5W88aFP
— S.V. Dáte (@svdate) March 18, 2020