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God unleashed COVID-19 because he hates phone use in synagogues – Patheos

Posted By on May 23, 2020

THE closure of synagogues during the pandemic lockdown in Israel is Gods way of punishing Jews for using their cell phones during prayer.

So says Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, above, the most senior non-hassidic, ultra-Orthodox rabbi in the world.

The rabbi, 92, made the claim in a letter to the daily ultra-Orthodox Yated Neeman. In it he suggested that Jews have been banished from synagogues by a god pissed off with people chattering on their phones instead of praying. He wrote:

For our many sins it has been many weeks since we were banished from our synagogues and study halls, like a servant who came to pour wine for his master and the master poured the jug on his face.

It appears that this is a sign from Heaven for the sin in which the sanctity of synagogues has been cheapened by having cell phones open and speaking on them while people are praying, and this is great disrespect for prayer and the sanctity of synagogues, and is in total opposition to Jewish law.

Kanievsky said that synagogue administrators should therefore completely ban people from praying in synagogue while their phones are turned on, and said that they should warn worshippers about this issue.

Kanievsky said that administrators in Israel and around the world should provide cupboards or other storage facilities outside of the prayer hall for worshippers to deposit their cell phones.

The ultra-Orthodox community has been hit particularly hard by COVID-19, with a high number of infections and deaths relative to their proportion of the population.

Kanievsky and Edelstein were both reluctant to shut synagogues, schools and yeshivas at the beginning of the governments lock down regulations, although Edelstein came on board with the directives sightly sooner than Kanievsky and became very strict about adhering to the social-distancing guidelines.

The difference between the positions of the two rabbis on the public-health crisis were underlined when Kanievsky sent a letter for publication to Yated Neeman in mid-April saying educational institutions should reopen immediately. Edelstein instructed the newspaper not to publish it.

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God unleashed COVID-19 because he hates phone use in synagogues - Patheos

Trump Demands That Governors Reopen Houses of Worship – The New York Times

Posted By on May 23, 2020

Some White House officials suggest deaths are overcounted. Experts disagree.

As the United States continues its advance toward 100,000 coronavirus deaths, a grim milestone the country is expected to reach in the coming days, President Trump and members of his administration have begun questioning the official coronavirus death toll, suggesting the numbers are inflated.

Last Friday, Mr. Trump told reporters that he accepted the current death toll, but that the figures could be lower than the official count, which now totals more than 95,000.

Most statisticians and public health experts say he is wrong; the death toll is probably far higher than what is publicly known. People are dying at their houses and nursing homes without ever being tested, they say, and deaths early this year were likely misidentified as influenza or described only as pneumonia.

Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the White Houses coronavirus response coordinator, has said publicly that the American health care system incorporates a generous definition of a death caused by Covid-19.

There are other countries that if you had a pre-existing condition, and lets say the virus caused you to go to the I.C.U., and then have a heart or kidney problem some countries are recording that as a heart issue or a kidney issue and not a Covid-19 death, she said at a White House news conference last month.

In a brief interview on Thursday, Dr. Birx stressed that there had been no pressure to alter data. But concerns about official statistics are not limited to the death toll, or to administration officials.

Epidemiologists said they were stunned to learn that the C.D.C. is combining tests that detect active infection with those that detect recovery from Covid-19 a system that muddies the picture of the pandemic but raises the percentage of Americans tested as President Trump boasts about testing.

Experts said that data from antibody tests and active virus tests should never be mixed.

It just doesnt make any sense, said Natalie Dean, a biostatistician at the University of Florida. All of us are really baffled.

Epidemiologists, state health officials and a spokeswoman for the C.D.C. said there was no ill intent; they attributed the flawed reporting system to confusion and fatigue in overworked state and local health departments that typically track infections not tests during outbreaks.

Trump demands that governors let houses of worship reopen.

President Trump stepped into the culture wars again on Friday, taking the side of some religious leaders against governors who have moved slowly in reopening places of worship amid the pandemic.

Without any clear authority to do so, Mr. Trump said that he was calling houses of faith, including churches, synagogues, and mosques, essential services and urged governors to reopen them right now.

Today I am identifying houses of worship churches, synagogue and mosques as essential places that provide essential services, Mr. Trump said at a hastily scheduled briefing at the White House on Friday. Some governors have deemed liquor stores and abortion clinics as essential but have left out churches and other houses of worship. Its not right.

After he spoke, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a number of long-delayed guidelines with suggestions for steps that houses of worship can take to curb the spread of the virus. Among them was a recommendation that religious officials defer to the directive of state and local governments.

Still, the president threatened to override the governors if they did not follow his order, though it was not immediately clear what powers he was claiming. I call upon governors to allow our churches and places of worship to open right now, he said. If theres any question, theyre going to have to call me, but theyre not going to be successful in that call.

When the C.D.C. recently released a set of guidelines for reopening, its report largely mirrored an earlier draft version that the White House had rejected because Trump administration officials worried that the suggestions infringed on religious rights.

On Friday the C.D.C.s new guidelines for religious communities suggested that they consider a number of limitations to keep congregations safe. Among them:

Take steps to limit the size of gatherings in accordance with the guidance and directives of state and local authorities.

Consider suspending or at least decreasing use of a choir/musical ensembles and congregant singing, chanting, or reciting during services or other programming, if appropriate within the faith tradition. The act of singing may contribute to transmission of Covid-19, possibly through emission of aerosols.

Consider temporarily limiting the sharing of frequently touched objects that cannot be easily cleaned between persons, such as worship aids, prayer rugs, prayer books, hymnals, religious texts and other bulletins, books, shared cups, or other items received, passed or shared among congregants.

Mr. Trump said Friday at the White House that the nation needs religion. In America, we need more prayer, not less, he said. He left without taking questions.

David Postman, the chief of staff for Gov. Jay Inslee of Washington, said the state didnt know what the presidents comments meant and noted the state had not seen any formal order. We dont believe the president has the ability to dictate what states can and cannot open, Mr. Postman said.

Were not ready, she said. Honestly, that would be reckless. Its Friday. Theyre not ready.

States differ on their approaches to religious services during the pandemic.

It was not clear what authority President Trump was invoking on Friday when he called for governors to allow our churches and places of worship to open right now, and threatened to override them if they did not. Soon after he spoke, though, the C.D.C. issued guidelines urging faith leaders to take steps to limit the size of gatherings in accordance with the guidance and directives of state and local authorities.

States and localities have been taking a variety of approaches to religious services since the outbreak began.

Houses of worship were already allowed to operate in more than half of the states, though many remain under social distancing instructions and many individual churches, synagogues and mosques have decided to remain closed for safety.

There have been tensions in places that still have restrictions in place. In California, more than 1,200 pastors signed a declaration protesting the states restrictions on in-person services and pledged to reopen their churches by May 31 even if the restrictions are not lifted. Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, said Friday that the state was working with faith leaders on guidelines to reopen in a safe and responsible manner that would be released by Monday at the latest.

The states guidelines, which will distinguish between megachurches and smaller venues, deal with the configuration of pews and sanitation protocols, the governor said.

In Illinois, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said on Friday that he would continue to operate on the basis of science and data in deciding when it was safe for houses of worship to open.

Im as anxious as anybody to make sure that our churches, our mosques, our synagogues open back to where they were before Covid-19 came along, Mr. Pritzker said. Were gradually moving in that direction. But theres no doubt the most important thing is, we do not want parishioners to get ill because their faith leaders bring them together.

The presidents call to let in-person services resume came just before one of the biggest Muslim holidays of the year, Eid al-Fitr, which starts Saturday night.

Washington State currently allows drive-in services, where congregants remain in their vehicles, and allows houses of worship to bring in personnel to broadcast and stream videos of services. Officials there have been working with an interfaith group to develop guidelines on how religious institutions can safely open up for more in-person activities.

And in some states, houses of worships were never required to close. In Pennsylvania, religious institutions were exempt from a stay-at-home order, though Gov. Tom Wolf has advised religious leaders not to hold in-person services or large gatherings to protect people from the virus.

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, who on Friday extended the states stay-at-home order through June 12, has banned large gatherings but also said that houses of worship would not be subject to penalties, leaving the decision in the hands of religious leaders. Many churches, synagogues and mosques there decided to remain closed anyway, and those that are reopening often remain under strict guidelines, including limiting the number of congregants who could enter.

In hard-hit New York, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo moved this week to allow religious gatherings of up to 10 people to resume as long as attendees wear masks and maintain social distance. The announcement was particularly significant for Jewish congregations, where a minyan, defined as 10 people over 13, is required for a worship service.

Birx expresses concerns about case levels in Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington.

One testing measure shows that coronavirus cases are persisting at worrisome rates in three major metropolitan areas Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington, D.C. that are still under stay-at-home orders, a top White House official said on Friday.

We have concerns of where cities have remained closed and metros that have remained closed but have still persistent high number of cases, Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the White Houses coronavirus response coordinator, told reporters at a news conference. She said officials from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were working with local officials in the three cities to really understand where these new cases coming from, and what do we need to do to prevent them in the future.

Dr. Birxs concern did not suggest that the case rates in the three regions were spiking to alarming new levels, but rather that they were not dropping at the same rate as in many other cities.

Dr. Birx singled out the Washington area which includes the district as well as parts of Maryland and Virginia and said it led the country in the percentage of positive test results, a measure different from total coronavirus cases. Among those who have tested positive is the former N.B.A. all-star Patrick Ewing, now the mens basketball coach at Georgetown University in Washington, who announced on Twitter on Friday that he had the virus.

Unlike New York, the Washington area has seen no dramatic decline in positive test rates or emergency room visits, Dr. Birx said.

Further complicating the picture, Mayor Muriel E. Bowser of Washington said on Thursday that the city could begin a phased reopening as early as May 29, pointing to figures that showed a downward trend in spread of the virus for almost two weeks. Yet on the same day, Washington, D.C., and Virginia announced single-day highs in cases.

The Washington regions high positive-test percentage comes despite reassuring news in most states: 42 have a rate under 10 percent of positive test results as part of a rolling, seven-day average, Dr. Birx said.

The New York area, which includes Jersey City and Newark, is seeing steeper declines by that test result measure, Dr. Birx said. And cities that have been especially hard hit, such as Detroit, Boston and Miami, now have more promising daily case counts.

Ahead of a holiday weekend, beach towns are telling N.Y.C. residents to stay away.

In the Hamptons, the locals have put up barricades to limit parking and deployed enforcement officers to ticket outsiders. Jersey Shore towns have banned short-term leases and Airbnb rentals. And on Long Island, the Suffolk County executives office taunted Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York City: Do your job. Figure out a plan to safely reopen your beaches.

Since the pandemic began, tensions have flared over whether too many New York City residents have decamped to outlying vacation areas, potentially taking the virus with them. But now the region appears on the brink of a full-fledged (and nasty) battle over beaches, touched off by the citys decision to keep its shoreline closed.

In normal times, start of beach season on Memorial Day weekend incites a mass migration from New York to Long Island, the Jersey Shore and, to a lesser extent, Connecticut. But the extension of beach closings in New York City has led to a backlash from local officials in those areas, who say they fear that their shorelines will be overwhelmed by an exodus of sun-starved New Yorkers blocked from their own beaches, which can in normal times attract a million people a day.

To maintain social distancing, beaches across the region are moving to limit access to everyone, and special rules have also been adopted to keep outsiders away.

The Justice Department on Friday backed an Illinois Republicans effort to invalidate the states stay-at-home order, the latest effort by the federal government to undermine governors coronavirus measures.

The U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Illinois argued in a legal brief that Gov. J. B. Pritzker, a Democrat, had exceeded his authority by extending his executive order for more than 30 days.

The brief came in response to a directive from Attorney General William P. Barr that department lawyers review stay-at-home orders around the country to ensure that civil liberties are protected.

Since Mr. Barrs request, the Justice Department has increasingly asserted itself in arguing over the legality of states sweeping orders in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Under our system, all public officials, including governors, must comply with the law, especially during times of crisis, Eric Dreiband, the head of the departments civil rights division, said in a statement. On Friday, Mr. Dreiband also warned in a letter to Mayor Eric Garcetti of Los Angeles that a long-term lockdown could be illegal.

The move in Illinois came in a lawsuit that was filed by Darren Bailey, a Republican state representative whose fellow lawmakers kicked him out of the building in which they had gathered because he refused to wear a mask. Mr. Bailey had asked an Illinois court to declare the governors order invalid. The governor this week sought to have the case transferred to federal court, a move the Justice Department also said was wrong.

Airlines are permitted to stop flying to dozens of U.S. cities.

The Transportation Department said late Friday that it would tentatively allow 15 airlines to stop flights to about 60 mostly small and midsize cities, though none of the destinations stand to lose service entirely.

American Airlines would be allowed to stop flying to airports in Worcester, Mass., and Aspen, Colo. Delta Air Lines would be able to stop service to Erie, Pa., and Flint, Mich. United Airlines would be able to stop flights to Fairbanks, Alaska; Kalamazoo, Mich.; and Myrtle Beach, S.C., among other locations.

None of the cities would be left without service, the agency said, because it granted exemptions only if other airlines still flew there. Some of the affected regions are also served by other airports.

The decision is rooted in the federal stimulus act passed in late March. Under that law, any airline that received federal assistance is required to maintain a minimum number of flights to locations that it had served before the pandemic. But the law also allowed the Transportation Department to grant exceptions, which it has done regularly for weeks.

The Department of Homeland Security late Friday provided exemptions for certain professional athletes from its travel restrictions that Trump administration officials have said are crucial to preventing the spread of the coronavirus.

The department said in a statement that foreign baseball, basketball, golf, hockey and tennis players, as well as their families and essential staff members, would be allowed to enter the United States. In his push to reopen the economy, President Trump has encouraged sports commissioners to resume play.

Professional sporting events provide much-needed economic benefits, but equally important, they provide community pride and national unity, said Chad F. Wolf, the acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. In todays environment, Americans need their sports.

In late January, the administration prohibited foreign travelers who had been in China within the previous 14 days from coming to the United States. The administration later put similar restrictions in place for those from Iran and many European countries, including Britain.

The order on Friday said that allowing the athletes into the United States was within the national interest. But homeland security officials have defended using health authorities granted to the surgeon general to rapidly turn away asylum-seeking migrants at the southwestern border.

As businesses navigate the pandemic, summer internships are sacrificed.

When she found out in mid-March that she had landed an internship with an education nonprofit in Washington, Lydia Burns, a senior at the University of Louisville, called her mother to celebrate.

The euphoria lasted all of a week. As she worked on a paper the next Tuesday, Ms. Burns got an email from the nonprofit: The internship was canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic. She burst into tears.

I feel like I had such a strong plan, she said. I knew what I was going to do I had been working for it all of college. Now I dont know what Im going to do.

For millions of college students, internships can be a steppingstone to full-time work, a vital source of income and even a graduation requirement.

But like so much else, summer internships have been upended by the pandemic, with a wide range of major companies, including tech firms like Yelp and entertainment behemoths like the Walt Disney Company, canceling programs and rescinding offers. Instead, students who had hoped to experience an office setting for the first time are instead looking for work at fast-food restaurants.

The early-stage trial, published in the Lancet, was conducted by researchers at several laboratories and included 108 participants. Subjects who got the vaccine mounted a moderate immune response to the virus, which peaked 28 days after the inoculation, the researchers found.

A vaccine to the new coronavirus is considered to be the best long-term solution to ending the pandemic and helping countries reopen their societies. Nearly 100 teams worldwide are racing to test various candidates.

On Monday, Moderna announced that its RNA vaccine appears to be safe and effective, based on results from eight people in its trial. On Wednesday, researchers in Boston said a prototype vaccine protected monkeys from coronavirus infection.

The vaccine reported today was created with another virus, an adenovirus called Ad5 that easily enters human cells.

But the virus is one that many people already have been exposed to, and some experts have worried that too many already have antibodies to Ad5, limiting its usefulness as a way to deliver a vaccine.

Although the vaccine did elicit some immune response, the results are based on data from just a short period. It is not clear how long-lasting the protection might be.

Apart from pain at the injection site, close to half of the participants also reported fever, fatigue and headaches, and about one in five had muscle pain.

The participants knew whether they were receiving a low, medium or high dose, however, which may have influenced their perceptions of the side effects.

Deadly diseases could surge after disruptions to vaccination programs.

The widespread interruption of routine immunization programs around the world during the coronavirus pandemic is putting 80 million children under 1 year old at risk of contracting deadly, vaccine-preventable diseases, according to a report Friday by the World Health Organization, UNICEF and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.

The groups surveyed 129 poor and middle-income countries and found that 68 had some degree of disruption of vaccine services through clinics and through large inoculation campaigns.

Many public health experts say they are worried that deaths from diseases including cholera, rotavirus and diphtheria could far outstrip those from Covid-19 itself.

But officials are now moving toward a cautious risk-benefit analysis.

Employers are preparing to test their workers as they return to offices.

As the country reopens, employers are looking into how to safely bring back their workers. One recurring question: Should they be tested for the new coronavirus?

Some businesses are moving ahead. Amazon plans to spend as much as $1 billion this year to regularly test its work force, while laying the groundwork to build its own lab near the Cincinnati airport.

Las Vegas casinos are testing thousands of employees as they prepare to return to work, collecting nasal samples in convention halls. Gov. Steve Sisolak of Nevada is hoping to reopen the states gambling industry by June 4, he said on Friday.

And Major League Baseball, eager to begin its season, is proposing a detailed regimen that involves testing players and critical staff members multiple times a week.

While public health experts and government officials have emphasized that widespread testing will be critical to reopening, state and federal agencies have given little clear guidance on the role employers should play in detecting and tracking the virus.

Despite rapid advancements in testing, many limitations remain. Diagnostic tests, for example, only detect infections during a certain period. And antibody tests alone should not be used to make decisions about when people can return to work, the Association of Public Health Laboratories and Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists warned.

Some public health officials also said that broad-based testing might have unintended consequences.

We dont want people to get a false sense of security, said Karen Landers, a district medical officer with the Alabama Department of Public Health, which is not recommending that employers test all workers.

Guidelines from the C.D.C. making the rounds online this week are clarifying what we know about the spread of the virus.

The virus does not spread easily via contaminated surfaces, according to the agency. For those who were worried about wiping down grocery bags or disinfecting mailed packages, the news headlines highlighting this guidance in recent days might have brought some relief.

But this information is not new; the agency has been using similar language for months. If anything, the headlines have pulled into sharper focus what we already know. The virus is thought to spread mainly from one person to another, typically through droplets when an infected person sneezes, coughs or talks at close range even if that person is not showing symptoms.

The C.D.C.s website also says that touching a surface or object that has the virus on it and then touching their own mouth, nose, or possibly their eyes is a possible way for people to become infected. But those are not thought to be the main way the virus spreads.

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Trump Demands That Governors Reopen Houses of Worship - The New York Times

Houses Of Worship May Be Reopening, But I’ll Continue To Pray At Home. Where It’s Safe – WBUR

Posted By on May 23, 2020

There is so much I miss about going to Friday night Shabbat services at my temple,Temple Isaiah of Lexington, in suburban Boston.

First, there are the greetings we receive.In the pre-pandemic world, our clergy stood at the doors leading to the sanctuary, offering hugs and pecks on the cheek. Our family has been members for more than a decade. When our son, Simon, was little, our senior rabbi used to hoist him in the air, and the two shared a laugh. Now Simons 12, so they shake hands and smile. Shabbat shalom, we say, wishing each other peace as the sabbath begins.

Theres also the music: dozens to hundreds of voices fill our sanctuary with song. Theres a tall glass window in that sacred space that gives us a glimpse of trees, often swaying in the wind, as we pray. Usually we sing the first verse of Psalm 133, known asHine Ma Tovin Hebrew. Over and over, we sing Hebrew words which loosely translate to, Behold how good and how pleasant it is for brothers and sisters to dwell together. Together. That has been the key.

I should be thrilled that Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker included houses of worshipin phase one of the states reopening plan. His plan cited safeguards, such as allowing only 40% capacity in houses of worship and keeping worshippers at least six feet apart, unless they were families.

But I am not thrilled. My family, like congregants of any faith, goes to religious services for all types of reasons, including seeking solace during tough times and joy during celebratory ones. We go, most of all, for community.And my temple has not yet decided to open its doors, given the danger of COVID-19 remains present.

For my family, [our religious community] is a critical part of our lives, but neither worship nor our temple community disappeared during the pandemic.

Its too soon to risk the lives offellow congregants, clergy, support workers and ourselves,whether we worship in temples, mosques, mandirs, gurdwaras or churches. Disease specialists predict a second waveand houses of worship have been hotbeds for spreading the virus.

I signed a petition recently supporting the return of tennis in Massachusetts (starting with singles) under certain conditions. I would feel safer outside exchanging forehands roughly 75 feet away from another person than I would sitting in a synagogue.

Is worship and being a part of a religious community essential to living? For my family, it is a critical part of our lives, but neither worship nor our temple community disappeared during the pandemic.

Our sons religious school continued via Zoom, and his teachers offered extra activities during the week. One teacher ran weekly online game sessions. Another taught an elective class on Israel. Our temple offered family activities, too, including making pizza on Zoom together with to-go kits from a local pizzeria. Laughing and talking, we pulled and stretched dough in our respective kitchens. We were marking the end of Passover, a holiday that requires us to give up leavened bread for eight days.

Friday nights, we often attend Shabbat services, but on Zoom. We sayshabbat shalomto each other at the beginning, even though its difficult to see who we are greeting. Dozens of boxes of people scroll by too quickly. Then, the clergy mutes us as they lead the service. At one service, my husband Pavlik, Simon and I were invited to lead the congregation in the blessing over the wine, known as thekiddush, and over the bread, theHaMotzi, at the end. We filled three cups with grape juice and brought a challah to our family room table. Unmuted, we sang the blessings. Everyone could hear us, though we couldnt hear them. In the safest way possible, our community was in this sort-of togetherness.

I knowseveral hundred pastors earlier this month implored Gov. Bakerto include houses of worship in the first phase. They argued that houses of worship were essential in the same way as many businesses. But houses of worship are not grocery stores. Praying online is not the ideal, but dont we all have a moral obligation to protect the health of each other?

Worship, even by Zoom, can still nourish our souls.

Follow Cognoscenti on Facebook and Twitter.

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Houses Of Worship May Be Reopening, But I'll Continue To Pray At Home. Where It's Safe - WBUR

Trump criticized for praising ‘good bloodlines’ of Henry Ford, who promoted anti-Semitism – USA TODAY

Posted By on May 23, 2020

President Donald Trump says he wore a mask and goggles out of view of reporters while he was touring a Ford plant in Michigan. (May 21) AP Domestic

President Donald Trump took heat on social media for praising the "good bloodlines" of Ford Motor Co. founder Henry Ford, who had a history of promoting anti-Semitic views.

"Thecompany foundedbya man named Henry Ford good bloodlines, good bloodlines if you believe in that stuff.You got good blood," Trump said Thursday during a tour of a Ford plant in Ypsilanti, Michigan.

"Henry Ford was an anti-Semite and one of America's staunchest proponents of eugenics. The President should apologize," Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt wrote on Twitterin response to a reporter's post about Trump's remarks.

Former White House ethics chief Walter Shaub denounced Trump's comments as "gaslit dog whistling" as the term bloodlines is often used in eugenics.

Ford published a set of anti-Semitic pamphlets called, "The International Jew."He alsospread conspiracy theories through his newspaper the Dearborn Independent.

The Henry Ford museum describes how Ford "saw Jews present in everything that he viewed as modern and distasteful" including the First World War, jazz, and short skirts. Ford used the network of Ford dealerships across the country to distribute the Dearborn Independent, building the newspaper to a circulation of 900,000 in 1926.

Ford apologized for the articles and closed the newspaper in 1927 after being sued for defamation byattorney Aaron Sapiro, a target of anti-Semitic attacks bythe Dearborn Independent.

Ford, however, accepted an award, the Grand Cross of the German Eagle, from Nazi Germany in 1938.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

More: Ford 'encouraged' Trump to wear mask during factory tour, but it came off for the cameras

William Clay Ford Jr., executive chairman of Ford Motor Co. and the great-grandson of Henry Ford, had attended the tour and had urged Trump to wear a mask during his visit.

"Bill Ford encouraged President Trump to wear a mask when he arrived," the company said in the statement. "He wore a mask during a private viewing of three Ford GTs from over the years.The President later removed the mask for the remainder of the visit."

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Trump criticized for praising 'good bloodlines' of Henry Ford, who promoted anti-Semitism - USA TODAY

Dozens of windows shattered at synagogue in Peoria, Ill. – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on May 23, 2020

Police in Peoria, Ill., are investigating nine broken windows at a synagogue in the city.

Authorities believe the vandalism at Congregation Anshai Emeth, which houses the Hebrew Day School, occurred between Tuesday and Wednesday afternoon, when it was reported to law enforcement.

It is under investigation by a detective, and at this point, there is no suspect information, said Officer Amy Dotson, public-information officer for the Peoria Police Department. No entry was made, and nothing in the chapel appeared to be disturbed.

She said the windows were broken by either rocks or bricks, and among the rooms impacted were classrooms and a kitchen.

Dotson added that we do have issues with kids and vandalism. I wouldnt say its prevalent to houses of worship, but it isnt completely uncommon. It is typically a juvenile delinquent situation.

Synagogue president Steven Marx told a local television station, WMBD, that the vandal or vandals used bricks or rocks to break a lot of windows and tried to break one door. It just seems to be simple vandalism, but the target, of course, makes you wonder. He confirmed this on Friday with JNS, noting that estimates for the damage have not yet been made.

As of press time, no motive had been associated with the incident. Officials have said as of now there is no indication of anti-Semitism.

Indeed, following a post on Facebook about the incident in which some expressed concern that this was a hate act, someone using the synagogues Facebook account responded, Maybe they didnt target us as Jews.

On Thursday evening, the Anti-Defamation League Midwest indicated its awareness of the incident and planned to speak with both law enforcement and members of the congregation.

On his personal Twitter account, David Goldenberg, ADLs Midwest regional director, said: The investigation is underway and motives for this vandalism are unknown at the moment, but we know it occurs at a time when anti-Semitic incidents are up 340 percent in Illinois since 2016.

The post Dozens of windows shattered at synagogue in Peoria, Ill. appeared first on JNS.org.

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Dozens of windows shattered at synagogue in Peoria, Ill. - Cleveland Jewish News

Will Georgia pass a hate crimes bill in wake of the Ahmaud Arbery shooting? – FOX 5 Atlanta

Posted By on May 23, 2020

Ahmaud Arbery shooting sparks hate crime law debate

Georgia is one of only four states without a hate crimes law. The others are South Carolina, Wyoming and Arkansas.

ATLANTA - A decades-long debate over hate crimes legislation is seeing a renewed wave of attention in Georgiafollowing the death of Ahmaud Arbery

Arbery, 25, who was black, was gunned down in coastal south Georgia in February. He was unarmed.

Gregory and Travis McMichael, both white, are charged with his murder. The pair chased down Arbery, who they believed was a burglar, before shooting him multiple times, according to police documents. The McMichaels claimed self-defense.

Some believe Arbery was targeted because of his race, but Georgia is one of only four states without a hate crimes law. The others areSouth Carolina, Wyoming and Arkansas.

Ahmaud Arbery, 25, was shot and killed while out jogging in a south Georgia neighborhood on Feb. 23, 2020. (Photo provided by family members)

Advocates, such as Allison Padilla-Goodman, vice president of theAnti-Defamation League's southern division, include Indiana in that group, calling the state's recently passed hate crimes statue too "convoluted and diluted" to count.

Padilla-Goodman is optimistic that the Arbery case will help pass a hate crimes bill this year with the investigation in the national spotlight.

"It's deeply disappointing that it takes such a horrific tragedy to put a necessary and comprehensive bill into action," said Padilla-Goodman, "but sometimes it takes tragedy."

There are numerous hate crimes-related proposals before Georgia lawmakers this year, but former felony prosecutor Chuck Efstration's HB 426 appears to have the most momentum.

"This is not criminalizing thought or speech," said state Rep. Chuck Efstration, R-Dacula. "The Hate Crimes Act would allow prosecutors to seek enhanced penalties only after a defendant is convicted of an underlying offense."

Padilla-Goodman helped craft the bi-partisan bill. ADL is one of 25 organizations part of the Coalition for a Hate Free Georgia, advocating forbetterhate crimelaws.

"Hate crimes are very different from a regular crime," Padilla-Goodman told FOX 5's Emilie Ikeda. "If I were to steal your wallet you'd feel broke; if I stole your wallet and yelled a racial or ethnic slur, people are going to feel that across the nation and world."

Critics fear the bill could limit free speech or judges' power in sentencing, since HB 426 requires a minimum sentence. It passed in the House last year but stalled in the Senate, largely at the behest of Senate Judiciary Chairman Jesse Stone, R-Waynesboro. He cited limited Republican support.

But Stone told FOX 5's Emilie Ikeda this year may be different with increased discussion around the topic in light of the Ahmaud Arbery case, calling the increased urgency on the manner a "good thing."

Stone said he would like to see a hate crimes bill pass, but it likely won't be one without carefully thought-out alterations. "We don't want to be pushed in the direction of passing legislation that we could, if we reflect on it, passed a better bill," Stone said.

HATE CRIME LAWS BY STATE, ADL

Georgia actually has a hate crime law on the books, but it was ruled unconstitutionally vague in 2004.

Should a bill pass this session, it cannot be applied to the Arbery case because it was not law on the date of his death. But the U.S. Department of Justice is considering federal hate crime charges, per the request of Georgia Attorney General, Chris Carr.

Some Democrats have pushed for HB 426 to be renamed the Ahmaud Arbery Hate Crimes Bill. Stone strongly pushed back on the premise because it references a pending case, adding, "We try not to influence decision makers in the judiciary as to how they should go with a particular case."

Some lawmakers will be joining ADL representatives in a public webinar Friday, May 22 at noon to discuss the hate crimes bill.

MORE COVERAGE ON THE AHMAUD ARBERY SHOOTING

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Will Georgia pass a hate crimes bill in wake of the Ahmaud Arbery shooting? - FOX 5 Atlanta

N.J. gym owner used megaphone with white supremacist sticker, says it was handed to me. – NJ.com

Posted By on May 23, 2020

PREVIOUS: Defiant N.J. gym shut down by state, owners vow to sue Murphy

The co-owner of a South Jersey gym at the center of an ongoing controversy about reopening used a megaphone labeled with a sticker from a noted white supremacist organization.

His lawyer, however, told NJ Advance Media that Atilils Gym owner Ian A. Smith was just handed the megaphone and that he has no association with the organization, the New Jersey European Heritage Association.

It was not his megaphone, Smiths lawyer James Mermigis told NJ Advance Media. Not that it makes it right that someone in the crowd had it."

We had nothing to do with them ... they showed up, uninvited, he said.

The rally in question took place on Monday, as hundreds of supporters gathered to cheer Smiths reopening of the gym. Images identifying the sticker on the megaphone began circulating on social media on Wednesday.

On its website, the Anti-Defamation League identifies the New Jersey European Heritage Association as a a small white supremacist group created in 2018.

Thursday morning, Smith, 33, posted a video on his Instagram page discussing what he called an entirely false rumor.

That megaphone was handed to me ... In no way do I ever or would I ever support any group linked to hate or racism of any kind, he said. That is not my message nor has it ever been. Please take a look at my family, we are a multi-racial family.

Smith hardened his stance in a statement sent to NJ Advance Media: I condemn any and all hate groups, including but not limited to New Jersey European Heritage Association. I did not ask any of their members to come and they are not welcome here.

When asked if his staff will tell the group to leave were they to return to the gym, Smith responded: Absolutely. I was unaware they were even here in the first place. I am uneducated about these groups, as I am not affiliated.

Smith made national news with an appearance on Fox News last weekend when he announced his gym would be reopen regardless of the consequences. Gov. Phil Murphy said that would be clear violation of his executive order, when asked last week during a daily briefing on the outbreak.

He opened the gym on Monday and was issued a summons. The gym was issued at least two additional citations since them, each of which includes a fine of up to $1,000 and possible jail time.

On Wednesday evening, the gym was shut down by the state, reportedly because of health code violations. Co-owner Frank Trumbetti vowed to fight the closure.

When asked by NJ Advance Media about the white supremacy organization sticker, Trumbetti said that they are not associated with any hate groups or white supremacy organizations. Ian already put something up on social media and Ill leave it at that, he said.

Smith faced further backlash Wednesday after word circulated that he had been charged in a previous drunk driving crash that killed another New Jersey man in 2007, while Smith was a student at Richard Stockton University in Galloway.

Rodrigo Torrejon contributed to this report.

Thank you for relying on us to provide the journalism you can trust. Please consider supporting NJ.com with a voluntary subscription.

Bobby Olivier may be reached at bolivier@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @BobbyOlivier and Facebook. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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N.J. gym owner used megaphone with white supremacist sticker, says it was handed to me. - NJ.com

Holy Jewish site of Esther and Mordechai set ablaze in Iran – reports – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 23, 2020

BERLIN - National Director of Anti-Defamation League (ADL) Jonathan Greenblatt announced Friday on Twitter that the tomb of Esther and Mordechai in Iran was torched."Disturbing reports from Iran that the tomb of Esther & Mordechai, a holy Jewish site, was set afire overnight. We hope that the authorities bring the perpetrators of this antisemitic act to justice & commit to protecting the holy sites of all religious minorities in Iran, Greenblatt tweeted. The Jerusalem Post is seeking to obtain the reports cited by Greenblatt in his tweet. Greenblatt has termed Iran's regime the top state-sponsor of antisemitism and Holocaust denial.Prior to the arson of the tomb, one Twitter user named Mohammad Mahdi Akhyar threatened to destroy the holy site on May 14 in response to a tweet by the Israel's Foreign Affairs' Farsi Twitter page. It is unclear if the arson is connected to Israel's Independence Day.US Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism Elan Carr strongly condemned the attack on the Tomb of Esther and Mordechai and said "Iran's regime is the world's chief state sponsor of antisemitism." He called on the Islamic Republic to "stop incitement" and "protect its Jewish community" and its other minorities.

The Iranian American Jewish Federation of New York and Los Angeles, and the members of the Iranian Jewish community in the United States said in a statement that they "are shocked and truly saddened by the news of fire in the ancient and official Iranian Heritage Site, the Tomb of Esther and Mordechai in Hamedan."

The statement continued that "We hereby ask the responsible members of the government of Islamic Republic of Iran to apprehend the perpetrators and bring them to justice for this barbaric act of insult to this holy site and take steps to protect other sites of religious and historic significance."

Karmel Melamed, an Iranian-American expert on the Jewish community in the Islamic Republic of Iran, tweeted: "My sources who have contacts with Iran's Jewish community have confirmed that there was an 'attempt' to burn the synagogue at the Tomb. Some smoke damage but the fire was minimal. No arrests of suspects have been made yet by Ayatollah regime."

The Iranian regime-controlled The Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported on Saturday that a suspect sought to enter the tomb. Radio Farda, the US government-funded news outlet that reports on Iran, wrote that IRNA "confirmed that there had been an attempt to break into the tomb of Esther and Mordechai, a holy Jewish site in Hamedan, but removed the report from its website two hours after its publication."

IRNA said the perpetrator tried to enter the building through an adjacent bank but was not successful, wrote Radio Farda, adding that IRNA claimed that the shrine did not suffer damages and that the suspect's faced was captured on CCTV video. IRNA said the police are searching for the perpetrator.

The Voice of America reporter Michael Lipin tweeted: "BREAKING: An eyewitness in #Iran's Hamadan city told @VOAIran/@VOANews he saw several fire trucks going to the Tomb of Esther and Mordechai after an apparent arson attack on Jewish holy site Thursday night, but authorities didn't allow people to get close."

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Holy Jewish site of Esther and Mordechai set ablaze in Iran - reports - The Jerusalem Post

Gary Bauer: Still a Threat The Patriot Post – Patriot Post

Posted By on May 23, 2020

While the progressive left and its media allies continue to obsess over the coronavirus and climate change,a jihadist attackedthe Naval Air Station Corpus Christi in Texas Thursday.

Local law enforcement said within hours that it was an act of terrorism. The attacker, who was killed by base security officers, was identified as a Syrian national and had studied in Mecca, Saudi Arabia.

This is the second jihadist attack against a U.S. Navy base in the past six months. Earlier in the week, Attorney General William Barr noted that the Pensacola shooter was working with Al Qaeda. We will see what else this investigation uncovers.

The Anti-Defamation League recently reported that there was a50% increaselast year in the number of domestic terrorism arrests linked to Islamic extremists. Clearly, radical Islamism remains a serious threat to our homeland and tothe rest of the world.

Speaking of Islamic Extremism

Earlier this week, we told you that the daughter of Congresswoman Ilhan Omar,Isra Hirsi, denounced U.S. troops as bits and baby killers in a recent TikTok post. Fast-forward to today.

Law-enforcement authorities in Maine areinvestigatingthe desecration of the grave of Master Sergeant Gary Gordon, a member of the Delta Force. Gordon was awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously for his courage during the Battle of Mogadishu.

You can learn more about his heroismhere, which served as the inspiration for the book and movie Black Hawk Down.

As you may recall, we were engaged in Somalia trying to save the country from radical Islamists. We later learned thatOsama Bin Ladenhad a major influence in the Battle of Mogadishu.

It is worth mentioning that the Somali community in Minnesota, represented by Congresswoman Omar, has become ahotbed of terrorist recruitment. There also happens to be a large number of Somali refugees in Maine.

I concede I have no evidence, but I wouldnt be surprised if we later learn that Master Sergeant Gordons grave was desecrated by an anti-American ingrate, perhaps someone inspired by Hirsis TikTok rant.

Communist China Threatens Hong Kong

Ever since Great Britain relinquished sovereignty over Hong Kong, the Chinese communist bosses in Beijing have gone through a charade of pretending that the city-state has some semblance of self-governance. They did this because the communist regime signed a treaty in which it promised Hong Kong semi-autonomy for 50 years.

Beijing has been chipping away at the freedoms the residents of Hong Kong have enjoyed for years, but now the charade is over. Communist China just launcheda direct assaulton the city.

After massive pro-democracy demonstrations forced Hong Kongs puppet leadersto back downfrom their outrageous extradition bill last year, the Chinese Communist Party is planning to impose the law banning treason, secession, sedition and subversion through the National Peoples Congress in Beijing.

Once that it is done, China will have destroyed the one country, two systems model. Hong Kong will not be allowed to operate under anything but the communist system.

One pro-democracy leader referred to Beijings move as the largest nuclear weapon the Chinese Communist Party has used against Hong Kong. Another described it as the end of Hong Kong.

Reaction from U.S. leaders was swift. Senators Pat Toomey (R-PA) and Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) are drafting legislationto impose sanctionson Chinese officials, banks, and businesses.

Senators Risch (R-ID), Rubio (R-FL), and Gardner (R-CO)blastedcommunist China for its unprecedented assault against Hong Kongs autonomy and for once again breaking its promises.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi tweeted that Beijings announcement was deeply disturbing and demonstrated the regimes complete disrespect for the rule of law.

I couldnt agree more! Communist China lies, cheats, and steals. Period.

The idea that a totalitarian system would tolerate a free city as part of its body politic is ludicrous on its face. Freedom in the midst of an oppressive regime is a threat to the oppressive regime, and Beijing is determined to stamp it out.

By the way, if China follows through on this action, it will send chills down the spines of the Taiwanese people. Unless the United States and our Asian allies safeguard our mutual interests in the Pacific, other countries, voluntarily or involuntarily, will fall into the orbit of communist China.

Again, it is impossible to imagine Beijing Biden standing up to the communist Chinese. In four decades in public office, he never did.

Speaking of Biden

He was on an influential show in the black community yesterday known as The Breakfast Club. The shows co-host is known as Charlamagne tha God.

Biden cut the interview short, and Charlamagne wasnt happy about it. He told Biden to come to New York to finish the interview because he had more questions for the former vice president.

Bidenbizarrely responded, If you have a problem figuring out whether youre for me or Trump, then you aint black.

Yes, Biden just questioned a mans ethnicity and pigeonholed an entire race of voters!

The Real COVID Scandal

Left-wing progressives have insisted that President Trump is responsible for every COVID death in the country. But they have been strangely silent about the growing scandal involving the obscene number of blue-state nursing-home patients who have died.

As we have reported recently, these deaths were due in large part to the policy decisions made by liberal governors.

Yesterday, theAssociated Pressreported thatmore than 4,300 COVID patientswere transferred from New York hospitals to nursing homes, in spite of everything that was known about just how vulnerable the elderly were to this virus.

Were also learning that Minnesota Governor Tim Walz (D) has some explaining to do, as81% of the COVID-related deathsin the North Star State have occurred in nursing homes.

These governors should be held accountable. It shows just how insane their plans are.

They have been on the news virtually every day reporting the latest death totals. Surely, they werent clueless about the details of where those deaths were occurring or why.

Yet, their response was to tell the hard-working people of their states to lock down, sit down, and shut up, while they presided over a massacre in the states nursing homes.

Meanwhile, they keep moving the goal posts from flattening the curve to falling numbers and now to waiting until theres a vaccine. There is no logic that can explain this.

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Gary Bauer: Still a Threat The Patriot Post - Patriot Post

After Iran’s Khameini compares Zionism to coronavirus, Netanyahu and Gantz issue warnings – Haaretz

Posted By on May 23, 2020

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu traded barbs on Friday after Khameneicalled on Palestinians to continue their uprising against Israel, comparing the Zionist regime to the coronavirus and a "cancerous tumor."

"The uprising by Palestinians should continue ... fight to liberate Palestine is an obligation and an Islamic jihad ... The Zionist regime (Israel) is a cancerous tumor in the region."Iran's top authority Khamenei said in an online speech. "The long-lasting virus of Zionists will be eliminated."

Coronavirus tracker: Live statistics of cases and deaths in Israel and around the world>>Latest coronavirus stories

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed Khamenei's speech later on Friday, saying "those who threaten to destroy Israel will find themselves in a similar danger."

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Israeli Defense Minister and Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz said: "The State of Israel has great challenges in a variety of arenas. Khamenei's statement that Israel is a 'cancerous tumor' illustrates this more than anything." He said on Facebook: "I do not suggest anyone to test us ... We will be prepared for all threats, and by any means."

Speaking on Jerusalem Day, Khamenei also compared the "Zionist regime" to coronavirus: "Some argue that the Zionist regime is a reality that the region must come to terms with. Today the coronavirus is a reality; should it be accepted or fought?! The long-lasting virus of Zionism will be uprooted thanks to the determination and faith of the youth," he said, while tweeting the hashtag #Covid1948, a reference to the year Israel was established.

Khamenei also called for more far-reaching support to armed organizations that fight Israel. "My main advice is to continue this struggle & better organize anti-occupation organizations, cooperation and expand the areas of Jihad inside Palestinian territories. Everyone must help the Palestinian fighters. We will proudly do everything in our power on this path," he said.

Khamenei also used classic anti-Semitic tropes and claimed that "The main agents of disastrous creation of israel are western governments conspiring with Jewish plutocrats, Britain prepared a fabrication called Zionism to play its role. After WWII, they abused problems of regions states & declared the bogus regime, nationless Zionist state."

Khamenei also claimed Israel was responsible for the creation of ISIS: "Pay attention! U.S. & Zionists policy is staging wars in Syria, carrying out constant killings in Yemen, [is responsible for] the creation of ISIS in Iraq, etc. to divert world of Islams attention & provide opportunities for Zionist regime.The way to prevent that is vigilance of proud youth of world of Islam."

He added: "Westerners and Jewish corporation owners main goal by fabricating the Zionist regime and this cancerous tumor was to build a stronghold to influence and dominate West Asia. So, they equipped the bogus, occupying regime with all kinds of military & non-military tools, even nukes.''

The United States and European Union rejected the comments. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Twitter dismissed them as "disgusting and hateful anti-Semitic remarks" that did not represent the tradition of tolerance of ordinary Iranians.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said they were "totally unacceptable and represent a deep source of concern".

Although leaders of Palestinian militant groups in Gaza, including Hamas and Islamic Jihad, have frequently praised Iran's financial and military support, Khamenei had not himself previously given public confirmation of Tehran's weapons supply. "Iran realized Palestinian fighters' only problem was lack of access to weapons. With divine guidance and assistance, we planned, and the balance of power has been transformed in Palestine, and today the Gaza Strip can stand against the aggression of the Zionist enemy and defeat it," he said.

Zeyad al-Nakhala, chief of Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which has publicly admitted getting Iranian arms and funds, praised Khamenei's comments. "We are ready for a long jihad and victory is granted," he said in remarks distributed by the group

Iranian officials have repeatedly called for an end to Israel, including by a referendum that would exclude most of its Jews while including Palestinians in the region and abroad.

Khamenei was speaking on Iran's annual Quds Day, which uses the Arabic name for Jerusalem, held on the last Friday of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

Iran cancelled nationwide Quds Day rallies due to coronavirus. Iran is one of the most-affected countries in the region with 7,300 deaths and a total of 131,652 infections.

Khamenei also denounced what he called treason by "political and cultural mercenaries in Muslim countries" helping Zionists to downplay the Palestine issue, an apparent reference to some Arab states including Iran's regional rival Saudi Arabia.

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After Iran's Khameini compares Zionism to coronavirus, Netanyahu and Gantz issue warnings - Haaretz


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