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Joe Burrow, Matthew Stafford took divergent paths from No. 1 pick to Super Bowl

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Matthew Stafford and Joe Burrow had almost nothing in common before Sunday except that they were top overall picks in the NFL draft.

Now, they are both Super Bowl quarterbacks.

Their journeys are almost polar opposites since each left an SEC powerhouse.

Stafford was the first selection in the 2009 draft out of Georgia and then spent a dozen years trying not to get pummeled in Detroit. Always considered a good player on a bad team – Detroit is that rare franchise that existed when the Super Bowl was created but never has been to it – Stafford was rescued by the Rams last year. In his first season as their QB, he‘s helped them to the big game, his connection with unanimous All-Pro receiver Cooper Kupp something very special. And seemingly unstoppable.

“Couldn’t be more grateful for Matthew Stafford,” coach Sean McVay said after Stafford went 31 of 45 for 337 yards with two TD passes in the 20-17 victory over San Francisco for the NFC title.

To say Stafford is a vast improvement over Jared Goff, the No. 1 overall choice in 2016, is too obvious. Stafford has a better arm, better technique, a better handle for pressure – statistically, he‘s the top NFL passer against blitzes – and, simply, better command of the most important position on the field. Yes, Goff got to the Super Bowl with the Rams in 2018, when they lost to New England with a wretched offensive performance. But Stafford in a lot of ways took the Rams to the big game rather than being along for the ride.

“You can’t write the story any better,” Stafford said. “I’m at a loss for words. I’m just having a blast playing ball with these guys and, shoot, we’ve got one more at the home stadium. Let’s get it done.”

The Rams (15-5) have blasted right into the Super Bowl in two weeks, when for the second straight year after it never occurred in the 54 previous editions, they will host it in their stadium. Tampa Bay turned that trick last season.

With the weapons on offense (Kupp and Odell Beckham Jr., most notably) and stars on defense such as unanimous All-Pro tackle Aaron Donald and linebacker Von Miller, a 2015 NFL champion with Denver, Stafford is in excellent position to turn his first season in L.A. into a Lombardi Trophy celebration.

But he‘ll have to get by Burrow, in his second pro season, and the Bengals (13-7).

Like Stafford, Burrow went to a struggling franchise. Oh, Cincinnati made the playoffs often enough in this century. It just bungled its way to seven consecutive postseason defeats under Marvin Lewis. When the Bengals went 2-14 in 2019 while Burrow was winning a national championship and setting records at LSU, it was an easy choice in the draft.

Still, his knee injury after 10 games (2-7-1 as a starter) seemed so appropriate for the Bengals. Another potentially good thing gone wrong.

Except so much has gone right in the last month, and here Burrow is, guiding the team to its first Super Bowl appearance in 33 years.

The injured good thing has turned into a healthy sure thing, with the brightest of futures.

“I wouldn’t call it surreal, I would say it’s exciting,” Burrow said. “I think if you would have told me before the season that we’d be going to the Super Bowl, I probably would have called you crazy. Then, you know, we play the whole season and nothing surprises me now.”

It’s never surprising when a surpassing talent like a Burrow succeeds in the NFL. But it’s also not shocking when one like Stafford languishes in a bad situation.

Take a look at QBs who were first overall selections and you get Peyton and Eli Manning, but you also get David Carr and JaMarcus Russell. For every John Elway, there is a Sam Bradford. Going further back, there’s a Troy Aikman in 1989 and a Jeff George in 1990.

No matter what happens at SoFi Stadium on Feb. 13, consider this: Only once before have two overall No. 1 drafted QBs met in a Super Bowl, six years ago when Peyton and the Broncos beat Cam Newton and the Panthers. Either the long journey of Stafford or the quicker trip for Burrow will end with hoisting the Lombardi Trophy – exactly what top draftees are supposed to accomplish.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

Adam Rippon takes pride in using his voice as an Olympian

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So, it’s just another competition? Got to treat the Winter Olympics that way?

Many athletes say that, perhaps trying to convince themselves that the Games are a regular, no major deal kind of event. Adam Rippon even used that ploy back in 2018.

Then Rippon — and the sporting world — discovered something very different.

Rippon, who came out publicly in October 2015, was the first openly gay athlete to win a medal for the United States in the Winter Olympics, bronze in the team event. His highly publicized verbal battles with Mike Pence, then the vice president, about open-mindedness and inclusivity were as memorable as nearly anything anyone did on the ice or snow in Pyeongchang.

“If I talk about my Olympics with someone and my experience,” Rippon says, “they will sometimes bring up my performances or talk about what it meant to them to see someone speaking up and using their voice. The further I get away from the Olympics, and my own experiences, the more I understand and more pride I have in what I was able to accomplish.”

No, those Olympics didn’t resemble whatsoever any other competitions.

“It never overshadowed my role as an Olympian and competing for Team USA,” Rippon says. “Even when I had a chance to speak up and do interviews I always knew the most important thing for me to do was to be a great representative of what it means to be on Team USA. That was always my main focus when I was there.”

He strongly believes it must be the same for everyone on the U.S. squad next month, including U.S. women’s figure skating champion Mariah Bell, with whom Rippon works as a quasi-coach, choreographer, sounding board and friend.

The Olympics taking place in a country with pervasive human rights issues shouldn’t distract the participants, Rippon notes.

“Many of the athletes had Olympic dreams before the Olympics were ever going to be in Beijing again,” he says. “I think the focus is that the athletes always want to be at an Olympics and they know what that means — especially for figure skating and (in the summer) gymnastics and swimming, where it is the premier event. The athletes have been put in a very impossible situation about commenting. Everyone stands on the side of everyone deserves to be treated equally and no human rights violations should be tolerated.

“But being there and competing is what they are there for.”

Rippon helped his country to a bronze medal in the team competition and finished 10th individually at the Pyeongchang Games. Then he moved on from skating, though he‘s a major part of Bell’s team.

Soon after those Olympics, Rippon won “Dancing With The Stars.” His involvement in the entertainment world continued and has expanded, while his increasing fame has provided Rippon a platform to speak out in support of LGBTQ rights and the freedom to be oneself.

His ventures have included working as a correspondent for ABC’s “Good Morning America” and “Nightline,” for which his feature based on a meeting with LGBTQ youth in Laramie, Wyoming was nominated for a GLAAD Award. He‘s appeared in the TV Show “Will & Grace” and in a Taylor Swift video.

Rippon‘s memoir, “Beautiful on the Outside,” was published in 2019, and he‘s hosted two seasons of “Break the Ice with Adam Rippon,” a weekly celebrity on-the-ice interview show that airs on his YouTube channel. Having been lured by the comedic itch, Rippon is in “Messyness,” a comedy clip series on MTV, and last year hosted “Talkin’ Tokyo” from the Tokyo Olympics for NBC.

“I enjoy doing a lot of comedy work and try to take it more seriously (as a profession),” he says. “I’ve gotten to experiment and explore what I really enjoy doing. Entertainment is so broad in what you can pursue. I’ve loved everything I have gotten to do in a comedy space. In the years coming and this year I really want to focus on that, working more in comedy.

“I’ve had a chance to do some comedy writing, which is really something I am passionate about, to be in that space, and another challenge to put all of my focus into.”

He also knows how challenging comedy is.

“Oh yeah,” Rippon says with a loud chuckle, “landing a triple axel is just as hard as making some people laugh sometimes.”

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

Kentucky jumps to No. 5 in Top 25 while Auburn, Gonzaga remain 1-2

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Auburn keeps winning, Kentucky is rising and that has the Southeastern Conference putting its imprint atop this week’s The Associated Press men’s college basketball poll.

Bruce Pearl’s Tigers earned 49 of 61 first-place votes in Monday’s new poll to extend the program’s first stay at No. 1 for a second straight week, while John Calipari’s Wildcats jumped to No. 5 for the program’s highest ranking in the AP Top 25 in more than two years. The SEC has a pair of top-five teams for the first time in nearly three years.

Auburn (20-1) has won 17 straight games since losing a double-overtime game to Connecticut in November. The Tigers earned a narrow win at Missouri in their first game at No. 1 then followed with Saturday’s home win against Oklahoma, not to mention the school reaching a deal with Pearl for an eight-year contract.

“It;’s been a good week,” Pearl said with a chuckle after the Sooners win.

Kentucky (17-4) had the week’s biggest jump, rising seven spots after winning by 18 at Kansas on Saturday. This marks the highest ranking for Kentucky since the 2019-20 season, when the Wildcats spent one week at No. 1 in the first regular-season poll and sat at No. 6 in early March.

“Every time we play like a team … I don’t think anybody can stop us,” Wildcats big man Oscar Tshiebwe said after the Kansas win.

This marks the first time the SEC had two top-five teams since February 2019, when Kentucky was fourth and Tennessee was fifth.

THE TOP TIER

Gonzaga remained at No. 2 and earned the other 12 first-place votes. UCLA climbed to No. 3, followed by Purdue — which claimed its first No. 1 ranking earlier this season. The Bruins opened the year at No. 2 and have now spent 11 weeks inside the top five, the Boilermakers nine.

CHAMPS’ STUMBLE

Houston and Arizona were next after Kentucky, followed by reigning national champion Baylor, which has stumbled after a 15-0 start and a 21-game winning streak that began with last year’s title run.

Baylor spent five weeks at No. 1 but has split its last six games after Saturday’s loss at Alabama. And the Bears’ four-spot slide marked the first time the Big 12 hasn’t had at least one team in the top five since the final poll of the 2018-19 season.

Baylor remains the only team in the country to rank in the top 10 of KenPom’s adjusted offensive efficiency (118.8 points per 100 possessions) and adjusted defensive efficiency (89.1).

RISING

While Kentucky had the biggest jump, No. 18 Illinois also had a notable move by climbing six spots following last week’s win against Michigan State. In all, nine teams rose in Monday’s poll.

SLIDING

Kansas fell five spots to No. 10 after its loss to Kentucky, but it was No. 25 LSU that took the week’s biggest tumble. The Tigers fell six spots after losing at TCU.

No. 19 Southern California and No. 22 Tennessee joined Arizona and Baylor in falling four spots. In all, nine teams fell from last week’s rankings.

STATUS QUO

Six teams remained locked in place for a second straight week, including No. 9 Duke, No. 11 Wisconsin, No. 16 Ohio State and No. 21 Xavier.

WELCOME BACK

Texas re-joined the poll at No. 23 as the lone new addition following a one-week absence in a season that saw the Longhorns open at No. 5.

FAREWELL (FOR NOW)

Davidson fell out of the poll from No. 25 after earning the program’s first AP Top 25 ranking since March 2015.

CONFERENCE WATCH

The Big 12, Big East and Big Ten tied for the national lead with five ranked teams each in Monday’s poll. The SEC has four, followed by the Pac-12’s three. The Atlantic Coast, West Coast and American Athletic conferences each had one ranked team.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

COVID-19 testing company faked results, lawsuit alleges

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OLYMPIA, Wash. — Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson has filed a lawsuit against an Illinois-based COVID-19 testing company, accusing it of improperly handling tests and providing fake results.

The lawsuit announced Monday and filed in King County Superior Court said the Center for COVID Control “failed to deliver prompt, valid and accurate results,” made deceptive promises of results within 48 hours, and reportedly instructed its employees to “lie to patients on a daily basis,” The Seattle Times reported.

It describes how the company expanded to about 300 locations throughout the United States and collected tens of thousands of tests a day.

Center for COVID Control contributed to the spread of COVID-19 when it provided false negative results,” Ferguson said in a statement. “These sham testing centers threatened the health and safety of our communities. They must be held accountable.”

The lawsuit also said the Center for COVID Control stored tests in garbage bags – rather than properly refrigerating them – backdated sample-collection dates so stale samples would still be processed and instructed its employees to lie when Washington residents asked about delayed results.

The Center for COVID Control did not respond to a request for comment Monday from the newspaper or from The Associated Press. All of its locations are closed “until further notice,” according to its website.

The company said in a news release on the website that it was using “this operational pause to train additional staff.”

The Center for COVID Control sites had been operating in Washington state since October and was increasingly popular particularly after the rapid spread of the omicron variant prompted a rise in demand for tests.

Locations in Seattle, Bellevue, Tacoma, Lakewood, University Place, Auburn, Lynnwood, Everett, Port Orchard and Yakima in Washington promised free test results within 15 minutes for a rapid test and within 48 hours for a more sensitive PCR test.

But recently, customers throughout the country have been complaining about the center’s delayed or lack of results, leading health authorities in several states, including California and Illinois, to launch investigations.

City officials in In Lakewood, Washington, issued a stop-work order at their local site in mid-January after receiving complaints about the company and finding it was operating without a business license, “among other concerns,” the city said.

The company didn’t have a license to operate a business in any Washington cities except Yakima, according to the attorney general’s office.

Ferguson’s office plans to file a motion for preliminary injunction “soon to immediately stop the Center for COVID Control’s unlawful conduct,” his statement said.

The lawsuit asks the court to order the Center for COVID Control to pay civil penalties of up to $12,500 per violation of the Consumer Protection Act and relinquish any profits the company made from its “unlawful conduct,” in addition to permanently closing all locations, the statement said.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

Tom Brady says he’s still evaluating his future plans

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TAMPA, Fla. — Tom Brady says he‘s still evaluating his future and the seven-time Super Bowl champion isn’t ready to make a decision about retirement.

“I’m just still going through the process that I said I was going through,” Brady said Monday night on his SiriusXM podcast. “Sometimes it takes some time to really evaluate how you feel, what you want to do, and I think when the time is right, I’ll be ready to make a decision, one way or the other, just like I said last week.”

The 44-year-old quarterback has already stated a desire to spend more time with his wife, supermodel Gisele Bundchen, and three children. He’s under contract for 2022 with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and is coming off one of the best seasons in his 22-year career.

“I understand my decision affects a lot of people’s lives so when that decision comes, it’ll come,” Brady said.

ESPN first reported Brady’s retirement on Saturday, citing unidentified sources. Brady’s health and wellness company posted a tweet indicating he’s retiring, and reaction came from around the world congratulating Brady on his career. Even the NFL’s Twitter account posted a series of congratulatory messages.

TB12sports quickly deleted its tweet, but ESPN and NFL Network continued reporting that Brady has played his last game.

“We’re in such an era of information and people want to be in front of the news often, and I totally understand that and understand that’s the environment we’re in,” Brady said. “But I think for me, it’s literally day to day with me. I’m trying to do the best I can every day and evaluate things as they come, and I’m trying to make a great decision for me and my family.”

Brady said he was disappointed that coverage of his possible retirement overshadowed the NFL’s conference championship games over the weekend.

“I’ll know when the time’s right,” he said. “When I know, I’ll know and when I don’t know, I don’t know, and I’m not going to race to some conclusion about that.”

When Brady walks away, he’ll do so as the NFL’s career leader in numerous passing categories and most prolific winner. He’d also be going out at the top of his game.

Brady led the NFL in yards passing (5,316), touchdowns (43), completions (485) and attempts (719), but the Buccaneers lost at home to the NFC champion Rams last Sunday in the divisional round after rallying from a 27-3 deficit to tie it in the final minute.

Brady won six Super Bowls with the Patriots playing for coach Bill Belichick, and got better with age. He led the Buccaneers to their second Super Bowl title last year in his first season in Tampa.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

New York Times buys Wordle puzzle game for seven figures

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The New York Times purchased the viral word puzzle game Wordle on Monday, adding the overnight sensation to its Games unit just three months after it hit the public.

The Times said it bought Wordle from its creator, Josh Wardle, a software engineer in Brooklyn, for a price “in the low seven figures.” The game will initially remain free to new and existing players as the company considers options for monetizing it.

“The Times remains focused on becoming the essential subscription for every English-speaking person seeking to understand and engage with the world. New York Times Games are a key part of that strategy,” the company said in a release.

CNBC reported that the Times uses its Games unit, which also hosts crosswords and spelling bees, to leverage new subscribers. At the end of the third quarter, the company had about 980,000 Games subscriptions.

Mr. Wardle created the game as a gift for his partner and released it to the public in October. He told the Times that the game went from 90 people playing it on Nov. 1 to 300,000 people playing it two months later.

In a social media post, he added that he was working with the Times to make sure it does not delete users’ wins and streaks.

The game gives players six tries to guess a predetermined five-letter word. Yellow and green squares indicate when a player has guessed a correct letter or a combined correct letter and placement.

Wordle provides just one puzzle per day, stoking the anticipation of its fans.

Rachel Maddow taking hiatus from MSNBC show

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NEW YORK — Rachel Maddow, MSNBC’s most popular personality, plans to tell her viewers Monday that she will take a hiatus of several weeks from her prime time show.

Maddow plans to use the time to work on a new podcast for NBC Universal, according to a person with knowledge of the plans who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss them.

Maddow‘s hiatus will stretch for several weeks starting this Friday, although she will appear on MSNBC’s coverage of major news events, like President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address, the person said.

Ali Velshi, her most frequent substitute, and other MSNBC personalities are expected to sub for her.

It could be a glimpse into MSNBC’s future. It has been widely reported that Maddow will step back from hosting her program every night as part of a new contract with the network, although neither she nor the network has publicly commented on that.

It was not immediately clear what her podcast project will be. She has made a popular podcast, “Bag Man,” about disgraced former Vice President Spiro Agnew.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

China leans into zero-COVID strategy before Olympics with lockdowns, tight ‘bubble’

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Sudden lockdowns that trap whole neighborhoods in their homes. A testing regimen that requires millions to get swabbed in a single weekend. And a bizarre request for Hong Kong pet lovers to turn in their hamsters after a mini-outbreak at a pet store.

Bucking the approach in much of the rest of the world, China is deploying a “zero-COVID” approach to the pandemic that reflects Beijing’s authoritarian instincts but may be unsustainable.

Ordinary citizens — and entire megacities — suffer from the hardships of constant virus surveillance and quarantining. At the same time, scientists wonder whether the Chinese will have enough natural immunity and antibodies from domestic vaccines to keep up with variants that have repeatedly spun off from the coronavirus discovered in Wuhan two years ago.

Although Europe and the U.S. have reported higher death totals than China, Western nations have learned hard lessons about living with the virus as nations consider a pivot to an endemic phase in which COVID-19 is managed as another respiratory disease.

China’s draconian policy is under a global microscope as its communist leaders prepare to stage the Winter Olympic Games in Beijing starting Friday while trying to prevent any major outbreaks of the highly contagious omicron variant.

“The zero COVID policy has never made sense, and the Chinese clinging to it in the midst of omicron will be futile,” said Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. “Zero-COVID is not a sustainable approach to a virus that was always destined for endemicity and could potentially be dangerous as it may have left a zero-COVID country’s population with little immunity and no ability to risk-calculate.”

He said “it is not surprising that such a policy is still in place in an authoritarian communist country in which the population is used to such measures.”

Beijing is shutting down housing complexes as COVID-19 pops up in greater numbers on the cusp of the Olympics while athletes, workers and journalists will be completely cut off from the local population for the two-week extravaganza.

Authorities detected more than 20 cases of COVID-19 over the weekend, bringing the total infections from its latest outbreak to over 100, according to the South China Morning Post.

Residents within housing compounds in the Fengtai and Anzhenli neighborhoods of Beijing‘s Chaoyang district are not allowed to leave their homes. They will be tested daily after the recent uptick in local cases.

The Xiong’an New Area, home to 1.2 million people southwest of Beijing, was quietly locked down a few days ago, raising eyebrows about the extent authorities will go to try to stiff-arm the virus.

Reported COVID-19 case totals would be enviable elsewhere in the world, but China’s government has shown no tolerance for any cases since the start of the pandemic. It imposed the first set of lockdowns on Wuhan in January 2020 and stuck to the model as other countries used lighter economic restrictions or moved on to hoping vaccines, treatments and masking would keep the virus in check.

A woman identified as Ms. Wang posted on the Chinese social media giant WeChat this month that she went on a blind date and got stuck at the man’s house because his community in Zhengzhou went into a sudden lockdown. It was unclear how many days she spent there, but he was reportedly a good cook.

Other accounts have been heart-wrenching, including videos that show children entering hospital isolation without their parents.

Xian, a city of 13 million known for its ancient Terracotta Army sculptures, recently started to lift strict COVID-19 restrictions that were in place for three weeks.

An account on the Chinese social media platform Weibo reported on a pregnant woman who miscarried outside a hospital after she was refused entry because she didn’t present a virus test. The report generated outrage over the severe restrictions. Officials apologized for negligence at the hospital and blamed an “insufficient” emergency plan for triaging patients, according to NBC News.

Hong Kong, meanwhile, recently allowed pet shops to begin selling hamsters and other small animals after a campaign to cull over 2,000 of the pets because of a small outbreak of the virus at one shop. Outsiders were outraged and offered to adopt the pets.

“The reporting from China is very limited, but you get these fragmentary reports [that] the population is getting restive and very concerned,” said William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University. “How long can they sustain this, not only from a public health perspective but from a social, political and economic perspective? They’re hanging in so far.”

Vaccine questions

China has administered 1.27 billion doses of its home-developed vaccines, resulting in 85% of the population becoming fully vaccinated, according to Our World in Data, an online tracker. But studies suggest Sinovac, a prominent Chinese vaccine that uses an inactivated virus, is not very effective against omicron, raising questions about the country’s ability to stiff-arm the fast-moving variant for posterity.

Former Food and Drug Commissioner Scott Gottlieb told CNBC this month that Chinese authorities were playing a futile game of whack-a-mole in trying to snuff out and contain even the most minor outbreaks. Unlike in other major countries, China’s population isn’t building up the natural defenses needed to curb COVID-19 in the long run.

“Outside of Wuhan, the prevalence is very low, so there is not a lot of immunity in the population,” Mr. Gottlieb said. “And they’ve deployed vaccines that have been far less effective against omicron.”

Beijing’s most pressing priority is holding a virus-free Olympics, where athletes, workers and journalists will be cut off from the rest of the city.

The process starts at the airport and includes high-speed rail to get participants to venues. In short, no one outside the bubble gets in and no one inside the bubble can exit.

The South China Morning Post said organizers detected 37 infections among athletes at the airport or the Olympics’ home base, or “bubble,” over the weekend, bringing the total to 176 since Jan. 23. The infections raised questions about whether the closed system will work or whether it will protect locals but not those inside the bubble.

Beijing limited tickets to domestic spectators and in January further restricted audiences to those who were invited to be on-site. In one sign of the drastic measures, authorities told locals not to help anyone in a car accident within Olympics-only lanes of highways.

Athletes will be tested daily with sensitive PCR tests, which can detect remnants of the virus after a person is no longer infectious, raising questions about whether some competitors will be frozen out of the competition for no good reason.

In an extension of the stifling atmosphere, authorities told foreign athletes not to protest its treatment of ethnic minorities. Officials recently said athletes who protest could be “subject to certain punishment.”

Asked about potential threats, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday, “I think we spoke to this last summer and conveyed a support for freedom of speech for individuals.”

The Biden administration has announced a diplomatic boycott of the Games, allowing American athletes to compete but sending no official government representatives to watch them. A handful of other countries, including Britain, Canada and Australia, have followed suit.

China’s nationalistic state media, meanwhile, argue that criticism of its approach to the Olympics and virus control reflects a “sour grapes” mentality in the West, which has struggled with far higher death totals during a pandemic that originated in China.

“Slander against China’s dynamic zero-COVID policy from some countries in the West, especially the U.S., is unconvincing,” a Global Times opinion piece said Monday. “In the face of the pandemic, some countries in the West have already laid down arms, and are unqualified in assigning blame and pointing fingers at China regarding China’s rational anti-epidemic efforts, which actually have been proven to be more effective in curbing the spread of the virus.”

After the Olympics, Chinese authorities will have to consider how and when to relax border controls and limits on movement throughout the country, particularly if the virus finds a way to attack cities that haven’t had much prior infection.

“I guess that’s the question — could there be in China waves of infection that come later than the rest of the world simply because they’ve been delayed and this virus will not be denied?” Dr. Schaffner said. “The impact will be not only on the Chinese population but the rest of the world because they could be variant generators.”

For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.

Health, The New York Today

Secretary of the Navy Del Toro going into quarantine after testing positive for COVID

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Add Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro to the list of top Pentagon officials who have been infected with the coronavirus despite being fully vaccinated.

On Monday, the Navy’s senior leader said he tested positive for COVID-19 after returning from an official trip Friday afternoon. He most recently tested negative on January 28, Mr. Del Toro said in a statement. The result comes even as the Navy and other services are beginning to weed out those in the ranks who have refused to get vaccinated against the global pandemic.

“I am following my physician’s instructions and will quarantine for the next five days at a minimum in accordance with CDC guidelines,” he said.

With Russia continuing to add troops to the forces arrayed along its border with Ukraine, Mr. Del Toro said he will attend key meetings and discussions virtually. Meredith Berger, the acting undersecretary of the Navy, will represent him during his absence.

“I am grateful to be fully vaccinated and to have received the booster shot in October,” he said. “I know my symptoms could be far worse.”

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Army General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, both recently tested positive for COVID-19 and went into quarantine until their tests were negative. 

“We must continue to vaccinate our naval forces and look out for our physical health as we finish the fight against COVID,” Mr. Del Toro said.

For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.

Health, The New York Today

Whoopi Goldberg: The Holocaust was ‘not about race’

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Liberal comedian Whoopi Goldberg said Monday that the Holocaust was “not about race,” because Germans and Jews are both White.

In a segment Monday on “The View” that prompted both immediate pushback from her co-hosts and social-media backlash, Ms. Goldberg made the comments in the context of a segment about the Holocaust-allegory book “Maus” being limited in a Tennessee school district.

Her co-hosts noted that a Florida bill, targeted at Critical Race Theory, could impede teaching about Nazi Germany’s murder of 6 million Jews, and many others, during World War II.

“The Holocaust isn’t about race,” the Black comedian said. “No, it’s not about race.”

A surprised Joy Behar pointed out correctly that Nazi Germany “considered Jews a different race.”

But Ms. Goldberg reiterated that “it’s not about race,” prompting Ms. Behar to reply “what is it about?”

“It’s about man’s inhumanity to man, that’s what it’s about,” she said in a reply sarcastically analogized on social media to an “All Lives Matter” response.

“It’s about a White supremacist going after Jews and Gypsies,” co-host Ana Navarro said, prompting her colleague to reply “but these are two White groups of people.”

Ms. Goldberg was unpersuaded when told that Nazis didn’t consider Jews to be “White.”

“You’re missing the point,” she insisted. “The minute you turn it into race, it goes down this alley. Let’s talk about it for what it is. It’s how people treat each other. It’s a problem. It doesn’t matter if you’re Black, or White, cause Black, White, Jews, Italians, everybody eats each other.”