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Sen. Rand Paul blasts Dr. Anthony Fauci for claiming that he represents science

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White House chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci insists that Republicans are actually criticizing science when they criticize him, but Sen. Rand Paul disagrees with the doctor’s political diagnosis.

The Kentucky Republican denounced Dr. Fauci for declaring “I represent science” in a Sunday interview on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

“The absolute hubris of someone claiming THEY represent science,” tweeted Mr. Paul, who is also a medical doctor. “It’s astounding and alarming that a public health bureaucrat would even think to claim such a thing, especially one who has worked so hard to ignore the science of natural immunity.”

In the interview, Dr. Fauci said there was a “distinct anti-science flavor” to the Republican criticism of his work on COVID-19.

“So if they get up and criticize science, nobody’s going to know what they’re talking about. But if they get up and really aim their bullets at Tony Fauci, well, people could recognize there’s a person there. There’s a face, there’s a voice you can recognize, you see him on television,” Dr. Fauci said. “So it’s easy to criticize, but they’re really criticizing science, because I represent science.”

Dr. Fauci and Mr. Paul, an ophthalmologist, have clashed repeatedly at Senate hearings over the U.S. response to the novel coronavirus.

Earlier this month, the senator called on Dr. Fauci to resign, accusing the National Institutes of Health of funding gain-of-function research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in central China, which Dr. Fauci denies.

Mr. Paul, who refused to wear a mask after recovering last year from COVID-19, has also charged Dr. Fauci with giving short shrift to the role of natural immunity in fighting off COVID-19 infections.

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

Health, The New York Today

Max Scherzer to join New York Mets on massive free agent deal

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Mr. Met, meet Mr. Max.

Former Washington Nationals pitcher Max Scherzer is expected to join the New York Mets in a massive three-year, $130 million deal, according to multiple reports. The Nationals traded Scherzer to the Los Angeles Dodgers last summer at the trade deadline and will now have to regularly face off against their former ace as Scherzer joins an NL East rival.

MLB insider Jon Heyman first reported Scherzer was nearing an agreement with the Mets

With an estimated annual salary of $43.3 million, Scherzer would become MLB’s highest-paid player on a per-year basis. And that appears to be by a substantial margin. According to Spotrac, the Yankees’ Gerrit Cole ($36 million) and the Angels’ Mike Trout ($35 million) are the next highest-paid players in baseball. There are others, such as Philadelphia’s Bryce Harper ($330 million) and the Dodgers’ Mookie Betts ($325 million), who have bigger contracts in terms of overall value, but the salaries are weighed down by the length of the deal. 

Under billionaire owner Steve Cohen, the Mets were looking to make a major splash this offseason as they look to get back into contention — and signing Scherzer, a three-time Cy Young winner, qualifies as such. 

Even at 37 years old, Scherzer was dominant in 2021 — finishing as a Cy Young finalist with a 15-4 record and a 2.46 ERA. He was even better after his trade to the Dodgers. Scherzer was a perfect 7-0 with a 1.98 ERA in 11 appearances. In the postseason, Scherzer was solid — though he was limited in the NLCS as he was forced to skip a start due to a “dead arm.” The Dodgers fell to the Atlanta Braves in six games. 

Scherzer’s deal comes days before MLB’s collective bargaining agreement is set to expire. If a new deal is not reached before 11:59 p.m. Wednesday, as expected, MLB owners will likely lockout the players for the league’s first work stoppage since the players’ strike in 1995. Scherzer is one of eight players who sit on the players’ union executive committee.

There has been a rush of free-agent deals in recent days because of the impending lockout — a change from past years when MLB’s free agency had become slow-moving. According to ESPN, there was $405 million worth of contracts handed out Sunday — including Marcus Semien’s seven-year, $175 million deal with the Texas Rangers and Kevin Gausman’s five-year, $110 million agreement with the Toronto Blue Jays.

Regardless of baseball’s labor tension, it will be jarring for Washington fans to see Scherzer in a Mets uniform next season. Scherzer spent six-plus seasons in the District after arriving on a seven-year, $215 million contract in 2015. He not only won the Cy Young twice in that span, but helped the Nationals win their first World Series title in 2019. Scherzer became a fan favorite for his intensity and precision on the mound.

In July, the Nationals sent Scherzer and shortstop Trea Turner to Dodgers for a package of young players that included catcher Keibert Ruiz, seen as one of the best prospects in MLB. 

“We got everything out of this group that we could’ve got out, and we reached the highest level,” Nationals general manager Mike Rizzo said then. “There’s no shame in having to take a step back, refocus, reboot, and start the process again. And that’s what we’re preparing to do.”

Scherzer is the second former Nationals star to join a Washington rival in recent years. Harper signed a 13-year, $330 million deal with the Phillies in 2019.

By joining the Mets, Scherzer gives New York a top pitching tandem alongside two-time Cy Young winner Jacob deGrom. 

It is not immediately clear who the Mets will start yet on opening day (March 31). But their opponent?

The Washington Nationals, who will be in the Big Apple for a three-game series.

Biden: Omicron cause for ‘concern’ but not ‘panic’

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President Biden said Monday the omicron variant first detected in South Africa is “cause for concern” but “not a cause for panic.”

The new coronavirus strain has now popped up in Canada and other countries as scientists raced to figure out if alarming mutations can puncture through vaccines and other defenses against the pandemic.

Mr. Biden said the U.S. will fight omicron with “action and speed, not chaos and confusion” and pleaded with Americans to get vaccinated or boosted with an extra dose if they haven’t already, saying the shots appeared to stave off deaths from the previous worrisome mutation, the delta variant.

“You have to get the shot, you have to get the booster,” Mr. Biden said. “We’re going to fight and beat this new variant as well.”

He said he wants widespread vaccination that suppresses the virus to be the “new normal,” rather than a recurring cycle of scary variants. And he said vaccination and mask-wearing will be the preferred plan of action instead of lockdowns.

Mr. Biden, who repeatedly referred to the variant as “omni-cron,” is plotting a response with Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health and his COVID-19 advisers as global scientists grapple with whether the variant can spread more rapidly, cause more severe illness than previous variants or elude the protective power of vaccines.

The new COVID-19 variant features nearly 30 mutations.

Drugmakers are laboring to figure out if approved vaccines are effective against omicron, but it may take about two weeks to get a clear picture. Companies such as Pfizer and Moderna said they could produce an updated version of their vaccines, though it would take at least three months and they are looking at whether existing booster shots fight off omicron.

Mr. Biden said Dr. Fauci and others believe the vaccine will be effective against the variant but he said the administration is in contact with drugmakers about contingency plans if needed, including specially tailored booster shots to fight omicron.

He directed the Food and Drug Administration to speed those specialized vaccines to market “without cutting any corners for safety.”

Vice President Kamala Harris and Dr. Fauci, who serves as the president’s top COVID-19 adviser, attended the speech.

Omicron has been detected on multiple continents. At least two cases were reported in Canada. The U.S. hasn’t detected a case among sequenced samples but the variant might already be here and spreading.

“This variant is a cause for concern, not a cause for panic,” Mr. Biden said. “We have the best vaccine in the world, the best medicines, the best scientists and we’re learning more every single day.”

Mr. Biden on Friday joined European nations in banning travel from South Africa and surrounding nations. The ban went into effect Monday.

Japan, Morocco and Israel banned all foreign travelers and Australia delayed a planned reopening of its borders.

The South African government took umbrage over travel bans that singled them out, saying their elite scientists raised the alarm over omicron only to be punished by wealthy nations that enjoy broad access to vaccines. Scientists also say the bans could make other governments less likely to come forward if they detect a new variant.

Mr. Biden said the travel ban bought the U.S. time to figure out a game plan and applauded South Africa for coming forward.

“This kind of transparency is to be encouraged and applauded,” Mr. Biden said.

Mr. Biden said he doesn’t think the travel restrictions will have a chilling effect and reiterated that he wanted to buy time to expand the vaccine push. As it stands, roughly 59% of the U.S. is fully vaccinated.

That’s a far higher rate than the 24% in South Africa and less than 10% in Africa as a whole, fueling calls by the World Health Organization and others for vaccine equity.

“Omicron’s very emergence is another reminder that although many of us might think we are done with COVID-19, it is not done with us. We are living through a cycle of panic and neglect. Hard-won gains could vanish in an instant. Our most immediate task, therefore, is to end this pandemic,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Monday.

Mr. Biden pushed other nations to donate more vaccines to poorer nations, touting the U.S.’s role as a leading donor while saying he will not leave Americans wanting for shots.

“Vaccinating the world is just one more tool in how we need to meet our moral obligations as Americans and how to best protect Americans we well,” Mr. Biden said.

The World Health Organization is pushing for greater vaccine equity but on Monday said it is important for receiving nations to get a heads up on shipments, instead of “ad hoc” deliveries, so they can distribute the vaccines wisely and store them properly.

Mr. Biden acknowledged that South Africa has sufficient supply but is struggling to get shots in arms. He didn’t outline a game plan for assistance on that front.

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

Health, The New York Today

What Uber’s Spies Really Did

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The relationship was tense, Mr. Gicinto recalled, and both men seemed uneasy about sharing leadership.

Still, their work ramped up quickly. The group, which grew to include dozens of employees, wanted to keep track of Uber’s competitors overseas, whether they were taxi drivers or executives at the Chinese ride-hailing firm Didi. But they also needed to protect their own executives from surveillance, and fend off web-scraping operations, which used automated systems to collect information about Uber’s pricing and driver supply.

It was an overwhelming task. To keep up, the team outsourced some of the projects to intelligence firms, which sent contractors to infiltrate driver protests. Other work was done in house, as Uber built its own scraping system to gather large amounts of competitor data. Scraping public data is legal, but the law limits the use of such data for commercial purposes.

The team rushed to hire more staff, and Mr. Gicinto recruited people he knew from his time at the C.I.A.: a fellow agent, Ed Russo, and Jake Nocon, a former agent for the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, who met Mr. Gicinto when they worked at the Joint Terrorism Task Force in San Diego.

When Jean Liu, Didi’s chief executive, visited the Bay Area, Uber had her tailed. And when Travis Kalanick, Uber’s chief executive at the time, traveled to Beijing, employees tried to throw off Didi’s surveillance teams, shuttling Mr. Kalanick’s phones to other hotels so his location would ping in a place he wasn’t.

“To us, every bit of this was this game of helping our executives carry out their meetings without divulging who they were meeting,” Mr. Henley, who led Uber’s global threat operations, said. “And it was super fun, right? It was a cat-and-mouse game going back and forth.”

Monday night game the most important of Washington’s season

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Every NFL game is more important than the previous one.

But Washington’s game Monday night against the visiting Seattle Seahawks is more than just that. It’s a make-or-break contest — one that could vault the team into the playoff picture or make those hopes more like a dream.

Entering the night with a two-game winning streak, Washington could put itself in a solid position in the wild card hunt — and even a chance at winning the division — with a win against the Seahawks.

According to FiveThirtyEight, a win Monday to move the Burgundy and Gold to 5-6 would give Washington a 46% chance to make the playoffs and a 25% chance of winning the NFC East.

Meanwhile, in the actual standings, Washington would be the No. 7 seed. If the season were over, that would be good enough for the final wild-card spot thanks to Washington holding a tiebreaker over Minnesota, New Orleans and Atlanta.

FiveThirtyEight, best known for its presidential forecast models, has a playoff projection model for the NFL season, but it gives Washington a better chance than other websites.

Before Monday’s game, ESPN’s FPI model gives Washington just a 13.2% chance of becoming a playoff team, less than half the chance FiveThirtyEight gives the team. (ESPN’s FPI doesn’t have a user function to predict future games like FiverThirtyEight’s model does.)

Either way, the fact that Washington would be sitting in a playoff spot with a win Monday is both welcome for a team that won the division last season — albeit with a 7-9 record — and surprising for a squad that was 2-6 entering its bye week.

That team — the one coming off a loss to Denver in which the offense put up only 10 points — had one of the NFL’s worst secondaries, a running back with a nagging shin injury and a quarterback who had thrown twice as many interceptions as touchdowns over the previous month.

There are three main reasons Washington has a shot at the playoffs if it wins Monday.

The first is Washington’s play itself. Two straight wins coming off a bye, one at home over the defending Super Bowl champion and Tom Brady-led Tampa Bay Buccaneers and another on the road against an energized Carolina team in the return of Cam Newton, was no small task. Without those wins, Washington wouldn’t be eyeing up the wild card, but the same could be said if it loses to Seattle on Monday.

The second reason is thanks to Roger Goodell and the NFL. The seventh playoff spot, which was added last season, has given hopes to Washington and every other middling team in the NFL. In previous seasons, a team two games below .500 on Thanksgiving would not be considered a potential playoff team — that is, unless their division was as dreadful as the NFC East was last season.

Lastly, during Washington’s two-game winning streak, multiple other NFC contenders have done Ron Rivera’s squad several favors.

Dallas, once a 7-2 shoe-in to win the NFC East, has lost two straight games — most recently a 36-33 overtime loss to Las Vegas on Thanksgiving. That’s why Washington even has a chance to win the division, as two of its remaining games are against the Cowboys on Dec. 12 and Dec. 26.

Philadelphia, a team that entered Sunday with a chance to compete for the NFC East and in a good spot to earn a wild card spot, lost to the Giants and severely hurt their postseason odds. Carolina also lost to Miami to fall to 5-7.

Also in the wild card hunt, Chicago’s playoff chances diminished in Week 11 with a loss to the Lamar Jackson-less Ravens, and the Saints (5-6) have lost four straight games, with the latest being a 31-6 drubbing by the Bills on Thursday night. Finally, a Washington win on Monday would put the final nail in the coffin on Seattle’s wild card hopes.

While Washington’s odds would be markedly better with a win Monday compared to a few weeks ago, they’re still not as likely as other NFC wild card contenders. San Francisco (6-5) has won three straight games, while the Kirk Cousins-led Minnesota Vikings are 5-6 and one spot behind Washington in the standings. If Washington wins Monday, FiveThirtyEight gives the 49ers a 73% chance of earning a wild card spot and the Vikings a 48% chance, slightly higher than Washington.  

None of this matters, though, if Washington doesn’t win Monday. A loss to the Seahawks puts Washington’s playoff odds at just 17%, according to FiveThirtyEight, with less than a 10% chance of winning the division.

Mike McCarthy tests positive for COVID-19 as Cowboys dealing with outbreak

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Dallas Cowboys coach Mike McCarthy is out for Thursday’s game against the New Orleans Saints after he tested positive for COVID-19, the team announced Monday.

McCarthy’s positive result is reportedly part of an outbreak among the Cowboys. ESPN reported that the Cowboys have “up to eight positives” at the moment. Four-time Pro Bowl wide receiver Amari Cooper has missed the last two games because of the virus and two assistant coaches — including offensive coach Joe Philbin — missed Thursday’s loss to the Las Vegas Raiders after testing positive.

McCarthy was vaccinated as the NFL requires coaches and executives to get the shot in order to be around players.

The Cowboys (7-4) have been reeling in recent weeks — having lost three of their last four. They still hold a 2 1/2-game lead in the NFC East, but after the Saints game, the Cowboys have three straight divisional games. 

Because McCarthy was vaccinated, he can return to the team as soon as he’s able to pass two COVID-19 tests within 24 hours, is symptom-free and receives medical clearance. Unvaccinated individuals must miss a minimum of 10 days.

Cooper faced backlash last week for being unvaccinated.

“I’m absolutely hot about it,” Hall of Fame wide receiver Michael Irvin told TMZ Sports. “Are you joking? …. I got a guy [in Cooper] who makes $21 million [per year] on the bench, at home, not playing. It’s crazy. Our job as athletes is to try to remove any reason of not winning the Super Bowl. … You have to try to mitigate any issue that can cost you a game or a Super Bowl. And COVID is one of them.

“You go get vaccinated to try to mitigate it, best you can. Now, you can still get it even after you get vaccinated, but it’s a different percentage, or chance, of you getting it,” said Irvin, a former Cowboy

Kirk Cousins lines up under right guard on pivotal fourth down

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Kirk Cousins is no stranger to red zone blunders. But the Minnesota Vikings quarterback committed a strange error, even by his standards, when he lined up under the right guard instead of the center on a pivotal fourth down in Sunday’s 34-26 loss to the San Francisco 49ers — forcing the Vikings to call a timeout in order to avoid a delay-of-game penalty.

Down eight in the fourth quarter, the Vikings faced fourth-and-goal and could have tied the game with a touchdown and two-point conversion. On the play, multiple Viking players come rushing in to tell Cousins he’s lined up wrong before the timeout is called. 

“We just didn’t get lined up properly and the play clock was winding down,” he told reporters afterward. “I was just moving, trying to get everybody settled up and just got under the wrong guy.”

After the timeout, Cousins threw an incomplete pass intended for Justin Jefferson. Minnesota fell to 5-6 on the season with the loss.

The error harkened back to 2015 when Cousins, then with Washington, took a knee instead of spiking the ball with seconds left in the first half during a game against the Philadelphia Eagles — mistakenly letting time expire.

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey announces exit from Twitter: ‘I decided it’s finally time for me to leave’

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Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey has resigned as CEO of the huge social media platform.

Mr. Dorsey announced his resignation on Twitter Monday and published a screenshot of an email to colleagues explaining his departure.

“I decided it’s finally time for me to leave. Why?” said Mr. Dorsey in the email. “There’s a lot of talk about the importance of a company being ‘founder-led.’ Ultimately, I believe that’s severely limiting and a single point of failure. I’ve worked hard to ensure this company can break away from its founding and founders.”

Twitter’s stock jumped more than 10% at the market’s opening bell on Monday amid rumors of his departure, according to reports. Mr. Dorsey’s exit was first reported by CNBC.

Mr. Dorsey, who is also CEO of the digital payments company Square, has previously sought to put distance between himself and Twitter amid a crush of scrutiny from policymakers in the U.S. and around the world. In 2019, Mr. Dorsey announced on Twitter he intended to move to Africa, but he later changed those plans in 2020 amid the coronavirus outbreak and the looming U.S. election.

Twitter’s approach to censorship and speech online inflamed criticism of its actions as influencing American politics. Twitter suspended accounts ranging from The New York Post to the Department of Homeland Security’s border chief in the days ahead of the 2020 election, and Mr. Dorsey later said such actions were mistakes during testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee in November 2020.

In 2021, Twitter banned former President Trump while he remained in office, and the company implemented a permanent ban against him. Mr. Trump then sued Twitter and Mr. Dorsey this year over allegations of a violation of the First Amendment through online censorship.

Tim Murtaugh, communications director for Mr. Trump’s 2020 campaign, jeered Mr. Dorsey’s exit on Monday.

“BREAKING: Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey to step down to ‘pursue other opportunities’ to crush free speech in different venues,” Mr. Murtaugh said on Twitter.

Mr. Dorsey also announced that Twitter Chief Technology Officer Parag Agrawal would be Twitter’s incoming CEO. Mr. Dorsey said in a statement that Mr. Agrawal’s work at the company was “transformational” and added, “It’s his time to lead.”

Mr. Dorsey and Mr. Agrawal are planning to hold a meeting with Twitter employees to discuss the transition on Tuesday. Mr. Agrawal also sent an email to Twitter employees telling them he would take their questions during the meeting. 

“The world is watching us right now, even more than they have before,” said Mr. Agrawal in the email, which he published on Twitter. “Lots of people are going to have lots of different views and opinions about today’s news. It’s because they care about Twitter and our future, and it’s a signal that the work we do here matters.” 

• This article is based in part on wire service reports.

French honor for Josephine Baker stirs conflict over racism

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PARIS (AP) – On the surface, it’s a powerful message against racism: a Black woman will, for the first time, join other luminaries interred in France’s Pantheon. But by choosing a U.S.-born figure — entertainer Josephine Baker – critics say France is continuing a long tradition of decrying racism abroad while obscuring it at home.

While Baker is widely appreciated in France, the decision has highlighted the divide between the country’s official doctrine of colorblind universalism and some increasingly vocal opponents, who argue that it has masked generations of systemic racism.

Baker’s entry into the Pantheon on Tuesday is the result of years of efforts from politicians, organizations and public figures. Most recently, a petition by Laurent Kupferman, an essayist on the French Republic, gained traction, and in July, French President Emmanuel Macron announced Baker would be “pantheonized.”

“The times are probably more conducive to having Josephine Baker’s fights resonate: the fight against racism, antisemitism, her part in the French Resistance,” Kupferman told The Associated Press. “The Pantheon is where you enter not because you’re famous but because of what you bring to the civic mind of the nation.”

Her nomination has been lauded as uncontroversial and seen as a way to reconcile French society after the difficulties of the pandemic and last year’s protests against French police violence, as George Floyd’s killing in the U.S. echoed incidents in France involving Black men who died in police custody.

Baker represented France’s “universalist” approach, which sees its people as simply citizens and does not count or identify them by race or ethnicity. The first article of the constitution says the French Republic and its values are considered universal, ensuring that all citizens have the same rights, regardless of their origin, race or religion.

In 1938, Baker joined what is today called LICRA, a prominent antiracist league and longtime advocate for her entry in the Pantheon.

“She loved universalism passionately and this France that does not care about skin color,” LICRA President Mario Stasi told The Associated Press. “When she arrived from the United States, she understood she came from a ‘communautaurist’ country where she was reminded of her origin and ethnicity, and in France, she felt total acceptance.”

Universalists pejoratively call opposing anti-racism activists “communautarists,” implying that they put community identity before universal French citizenry. Radical anti-racist groups, meanwhile, say that France first needs a reckoning with systemic racism – a term that is contested here – and the specific oppression experienced by different communities of color.

The term “communautarist” is also used to describe American society, which counts race in official censuses, academic studies and public discourse, which is taboo in France and seen as reducing people to a skin color.

For Rokhaya Diallo, a French commentator on issues related to race, “universalism is a utopia and myth that the republic tells about itself that does not correspond to any past or present reality,” she told The AP. “For Black and non-white people, the Republic has always been a space of inequality, of othering through the processes triggered by colonization.”

Lawyers, activists and academics have chronicled discrimination in police violence, in housing and in employment in France, notably against people with African or Arab origins. Universalists say this isn’t a structural part of French society, however, identifying racism as a moral matter and not inscribed within the state.

Kévi Donat, a Black French guide who gives tours of Black Paris, said Baker is the “most controversial” figure he highlights in his tours, in part because she initially earned fame in France for dancing in a banana belt that “played into stereotypes around Black and African people.”

“Sometimes Josephine Baker is used to say ‘in the U.S. there was racism, (but) all these Black Americans were welcomed in France,’ meaning we’re ahead, that we don’t have that problem here,” Donat said.

Baker was among several prominent Black Americans, especially artists and writers, who found refuge from American racism in France after the two World Wars, including the famed writer and intellectual James Baldwin.

But Françoise Vergès, a political scientist on questions of culture, race and colonization, said “symbolic gestures” like putting Baker in the Pantheon aren’t enough to extinguish racial discrimination in France.

“In 2021, even if it’s morally condemned, racism still exists and still has power over people’s lives,” she said.

In addition to her stage fame, Baker also spied for the French Resistance, marched alongside Martin Luther King Jr. in Washington, and raised what she called her “rainbow tribe” of children adopted from around the world.

For Stasi, the LICRA president, her “fight is universalist, so nationality in some way is irrelevant. … She perfectly inscribes herself in the (French) fight for ‘Liberty, Equality, Fraternity.’”

“Of course there was racism in France, but it wasn’t institutionalized like it was in America during segregation,” Kupferman said.

For Vergès, this obscures France’s own history of racism and colonialism, which includes a brutal war with Algeria, a former French colony, when it fought for independence from 1954 to 1962.

“It’s always easier to celebrate people who aren’t from your country,” she said. “It avoids questioning your own situation at home.”

Verges explained that moving abroad for anyone may offer some protection from racism, simply because you are seen by locals as different anyway, more American or French or Nigerian than Black.

“A country’s racism is in relationship with its own history,” Vergès said. “You also have French Black people in the U.S. who find it less racist than France, because being French protects them from being treated like Black Americans.”

Baldwin, the American writer, noted the same thought in a 1983 interview with the French news magazine Le Nouvel Observateur.

“In France, I am a Black American, posing no conceivable threat to French identity: in effect, I do not exist in France. I might have a very different tale to tell were I from Senegal – and a very bitter song to sing were I from Algeria,” he said.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.

Miss Universe hopeful tests positive for COVID-19 in Israel

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JERUSALEM (AP) – Organizers of the Miss Universe pageant said Monday that a contestant tested positive for COVID-19 after arriving in Israel, which is pressing ahead with plans to host the pageant despite closing its borders in the face of a newly detected variant.

They did not identify the contestant, and it was unclear if she had the omicron strain, which has raised alarm worldwide and was detected in a traveler returning to Israel last week.

The Miss Universe Organization said most of the 80 contestants have arrived in Israel and that the event will be held as planned on Dec. 12 in the southern city of Eilat with strict coronavirus protocols. The contestants will compete in national costumes, evening gowns and swimwear, and will answer a series of interview questions.

Israel closed its borders to all foreign travelers over the weekend, one of several measures taken to prevent the spread of the new variant after at least one case was detected, in a vaccinated traveler returning from Malawi. The variant was first identified in South Africa but cases have since been detected in several European countries as well as Hong Kong and Australia.

The organizers said the contestant tested positive upon arrival in Israel and was taken to a government-run isolation hotel. She was fully vaccinated and had been tested prior to departure, they said.

Israel had hoped the pageant would help draw tourists and project an image of Israel as a safe destination during the pandemic.

The pageant was already in the spotlight for being held in Israel amid boycott calls against the country over its treatment of the Palestinians. Citing COVID, Malaysia had announced it won’t send a contestant. And South Africa’s government said it was withdrawing support for the country’s representative over her participation in the event.

Both countries support the Palestinian cause.

Andrea Meza, the current Miss Universe, said the pageant shouldn’t be politicized in an interview with The Associated Press in Jerusalem, the epicenter of the conflict, earlier this month.

“Everyone with different beliefs, with different backgrounds, with different cultures, they all come together and when you are in there you forget about politics, about your religion,” she said. “It’s just about embracing other women.”

Meza, 27, represents Mexico and was crowned in May, during a COVID-delayed ceremony in Florida, where contestants accessorized their sparkling gowns with face masks. She hands over the crown in Eilat on Dec. 12.

Supporters of the Palestinian-led boycott, divestment and sanctions movement, known as BDS, view it as a nonviolent way of advocating for Palestinian rights. Israel‘s occupation of lands the Palestinians seek for a future state is well into its sixth decade, with peace talks having ground to a halt more than 10 years ago. Two prominent human rights groups say Israel‘s policies amount to apartheid.

Israel rejects the apartheid label, accusing the rights groups of being biased against it. It accuses BDS of antisemitism – allegations that boycott leaders adamantly deny – and says the movement’s end goal is to delegitimize and destroy Israel itself.

PACBI, a Palestinian activist group and founding member of the boycott movement, had called on contestants to “do no harm to our struggle for freedom, justice and equality by withdrawing from the pageant.”

The boycott movement has notched a number of successes over the years, with major artists like Lorde and Lana Del Ray canceling appearances because of Israel’s policies. But big stars keep coming, and major events like the Eurovision song contest – which included a performance by Madonna – have been held in Israel despite boycott calls.

Copyright © 2021 The Washington Times, LLC.