| Yesterday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) announced it had taken action against a soldier who went into a mosque in Jenin, in the West Bank, and sang Jewish prayers over a loudspeaker, filming himself doing so in a video that went viral. He was in Jenin as part of the IDF’s three-day raid there, which ended yesterday, and allegedly killed 12 people—at least 10 whom the Israeli military says are Hamas terrorists—while injuring 34.
“Israeli military incursions in Jenin, commonplace for years, have become more frequent since the Hamas-led attacks on Oct. 7,” reports The New York Times.
New CDC director on the job: Back in April 2020, 14 percent of Republicans said they had “not too much” or “no confidence at all” in “scientists to act in the public’s best interest.” Fast forward to now, it’s up to 38 percent, per Pew data. Of all American adults, “the share expressing the strongest level of trust in scientists—saying they have a great deal of confidence in them—has fallen from 39% in 2020 to 23% today.”
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) seems to think that if we just appoint a normie mom to the head spot, all will be well again. Not so.
“I’m not just the C.D.C. director, I’m also a mom,” Mandy K. Cohen told a Fox station in Dallas last month. Her daughters already got their COVID vaccines, “so I wouldn’t recommend something for the American people I wouldn’t recommend for my own family,” she said.
Cohen was picked by President Joe Biden to take over for Rochelle Walensky, who oversaw and enabled a coercive, expanded CDC that even saw fit to create an eviction moratorium that made it, in many places, impossible for landlords to evict nonpaying tenants. That CDC, under Walensky, seemed almost religiously committed to masking in schools—schools that were allowed to open, at least—even when credible studies contradicted that conclusion. At every turn, Walensky relied on suspect scientific research and favored blunt-forced tools that infringed on Americans’ civil liberties.
So now, the CDC is trying out Cohen, who is attempting to brand herself as a relatable messenger who can really speak to Red America.
But here’s the rub. “When Representative Daniel Crenshaw, Republican of Texas, pushed her to admit [during recent congressional testimony] that the C.D.C. had been wrong during the pandemic, she politely ignored the request,” according to The New York Times.
Until our public health agencies are fully rid of people who violated our civil liberties, and until those agencies admit their wrongdoing, public trust will not be restored, no matter how many times Cohen mentions her kids. |