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Discussion in 'Politics' started by gwb-trading, Apr 24, 2020.

  1. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    #1261     Jul 18, 2021
  2. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    The Latin American countries can't be very happy when they discover the Chinese vaccines are worthless --- and they have been sold the modern equivalent of snake oil.

    And it should be noted that in June and July the U.S. has exported a significant number of vaccine doses around the globe. Citing May figures in this article while ignoring June & July demonstrates the article bias. This article reads like propaganda material from the CCP.


    In Latin America, Chinese vaccine diplomacy is directly challenging US’s declining authority
    Beijing has seen the Covid-19 crisis as an opportunity to reinforce its ambitions as a rising power and exerting more influence worldwide.
    https://scroll.in/article/1000114/i...-directly-challenging-uss-declining-authority

    It is impossible to enter a room these days without talking about Covid-19 vaccines. If, however, you happened to be talking to Latin Americans, you would notice an unusual pattern: considerable gratitude towards China for its vaccine rollout.

    It is gratitude, moreover, that is very hard to find in Europe or the United States. The reason is simple: the number of vaccines provided by China to countries in need is truly impressive.
    During a global vaccine shortage, China has been able to provide 252 million doses to the world. This includes the majority of total doses made available to Latin American countries.

    Six national or regional entities can produce and distribute a consistent number of vaccines: Europe, the United States, China, South Korea and India. China has distributed the highest number, and almost half (42%) of these have gone outside its own country.

    As of May, no other country can match this figure. Most countries are focused primarily on achieving their own herd immunity first.

    Even more striking is the fact that the United States is exporting a mere 1% of its vaccines, almost solely to Canada and Mexico. In May, the US pledged to increase its exported doses by 100 million by the end of the year. Yet even if it had achieved this goal, it would not be even half of the Chinese figure. Chinese vaccine diplomacy in Latin America is challenging US authority in the region, at a time when US influence is in visible decline.

    Declining ‘Washington Consensus’
    The rationale behind American policy towards Latin America has long been that unstable neighbours (especially Communist ones) destabilise the region. In extreme cases, this has resulted in US involvement in various regime changes in Latin America. But the more frequently used mechanism of influence, especially since the end of the Cold War, has been economic diplomacy.

    The main tool for this has been the infamous Washington Consensus. The logic of this was very simple: a state-led economic model is a bad thing. An “economist approved” liberal model should therefore solve all Latin America’s problems. It did not work out like that.

    Despite good intentions, the International Monetary Fund and World Bank programmes did not alleviate Latin America’s problems. On the contrary, the Washington Consensus is often cited as having fuelled a resurgence of populism in Latin America. It is also held responsible for the succession of left-wing governments in the 1990s known as the Pink Tide.

    Five of the nations subject to the Washington Consensus (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico and Venezuela) even displayed authoritarian tendencies. In the mid-2010s the region experienced a so-called Blue Tide: the rise of liberal governments to counterbalance the previous left-wing ones. This phenomenon was also considered a long-term consequence of the chronic failure of US economic diplomacy on the continent.

    Today, Latin America still struggles with political instability and high levels of inequality. The United States’ top-down approach has failed. What is more, cooperation has dramatically declined because of the Trump administration’s approach and the US’s own internal problems.

    Rising Chinese power
    In this context, China has seen the Covid crisis as an opportunity to reinforce its ambitions as a rising power trying to exert more influence in the international order.

    A scheduled $8 trillion for project infrastructure in sixty-eight countries through the New Silk Road programme vividly captures its approach. Brazil, Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia already have partnership projects with China and Mexico is considering joining one.

    The US and Chinese tools for economic diplomacy are very similar in practice, yet fundamentally different in philosophy.

    The US strategy is based on individualism: We as a nation will be the most economically successful by working hard to realise our individuality... We will export the idea that this is the best possible system through soft power and economic cooperation.

    In contrast, Chinese economic diplomacy is an extension of a collective dream where individuals work hard to realise the success of the collectivity: everybody in their community and the world.

    In the context of Latin America, this competition between two philosophical approaches is especially risky for the United States. Too many factors favour the Chinese way of thinking: the inward-looking diplomatic approach of the United States during the Trump administration; the perennial flirtation of some Latin American countries with various forms of socialism; and the failure of the US’s own economic and other (capitalist) strategies there.

    Old international order
    In this power vacuum, the rise of China during a crisis situation might push the world toward a new international bipolar order. Latin America’s enthusiasm for Chinese vaccines might constitute the first grouping of countries genuinely lost to US influence.

    Latin America is not just showing an interest in vaccine rollout. It is also showing how the old dichotomy of capitalism versus socialism is becoming increasingly redundant in some parts of the world.

    Analogous to the fading of the US-Russia dichotomy, rising Chinese influence in Latin America shows countries becoming more open-minded towards different economic and social narratives. They are less concerned with “good” and “bad” and more concerned with the concrete opportunities different choices offer.

    This article was originally published at The Loop and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

    Support our journalism by contributing to Scroll Ground Reporting Fund. We welcome your comments at letters@scroll.in.
     
    Last edited: Jul 19, 2021
    #1262     Jul 19, 2021
  3. UsualName

    UsualName

    Just about 2x now... easy money.
     
    #1263     Jul 19, 2021
  4. WeToddDid2

    WeToddDid2

     
    #1264     Jul 19, 2021
    CaptainObvious likes this.
  5. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    New Jersey study says vaccines more than 99% effective against COVID-19
    https://nypost.com/2021/07/19/nj-study-vaccines-more-than-99-effective-against-covid-19/

    Coronavirus vaccines have been more than 99-percent effective against the coronavirus in New Jersey, according to an analysis released Monday by the state.

    The study looked at “breakthrough” cases — instances where people in the Garden State who were fully vaccinated against COVID-19 later tested positive.

    Through June 28, there were 4,432,769 people vaccinated in Jersey.

    The study found 3,474 COVID cases among people who were fully vaccinated — or a 99.92 percent effective rate.

    There were 84 vaccinated people who were hospitalized and 31 died from COVID — less than one tenth of one percent, according to the analysis.

    “These numbers speak for themselves. We only have a pandemic among the unvaccinated,” New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said in a statement announcing the results.

    “Everyone ages 12 and up who is eligible should go and get vaccinated.”

    A study released last week by Yale University and the New York City Health Department found similar results in the Big Apple in terms of vaxx effectiveness.

    That analysis concluded COVID vaccinations prevented a staggering 8,300 deaths and 44,000 hospitalizations in the city during the first six months of 2021.

    The Yale study claimed the city’s vaccination campaign stopped a projected 250,000 new coronavirus infections — and that just 1.1 percent of all new cases in the five boroughs came from fully vaccinated New Yorkers.

    Still, many New Yorkers — even hospital workers — are still resisting getting jabbed.

    The Post reported Sunday that nearly one-third of city hospital workers have not been vaccinated, according to the state Health Department. In the city’s 11 public hospitals, 40 percent of workers are unvaccinated.

    New York State Health Department officials also said they’ve found a low percentage of COVID cases among vaccinated New Yorkers, a situation it is tracking closely.

    “To date, the New York State Department of Health is aware of 8,718 breakthrough cases of COVID-19, 0.15% of fully vaccinated people. We are continuing to investigate the number of fully vaccinated people who may have been hospitalized or passed away,” said Health Department spokeswoman Abigail Barker.
     
    #1265     Jul 20, 2021
  6. UsualName

    UsualName

    Ive been looking into this and I got a couple of problems with the data. 1. I can’t find any information on the 31 deaths in regard to profile. Meaning age, gender, underlying conditions, etc. and 2. I don’t necessarily agree with comparing breakthrough infections to the entire vaccinated population. We have no way of knowing who in that pop was exposed to Covid and who in that pop actually got infected.

    Although, the proof is in the pudding when you like at hospitalizations and deaths total.
     
    #1266     Jul 20, 2021
  7. elderado

    elderado

    [​IMG]
     
    #1267     Jul 20, 2021
    WeToddDid2 likes this.
  8. Love it when they are exposed for the charlatans that they are.
     
    #1268     Jul 20, 2021
  9. WeToddDid2

    WeToddDid2

     
    #1269     Jul 20, 2021
  10. userque

    userque

    I thought you guys were seceding from Facebook.

    GETTR? Parler Right?

    Is that secession still on ... or what happened to it?

    Why do you all still care about Facebook?
     
    #1270     Jul 20, 2021