Sunday, March 15, 2026

Force of Infection, 3-15-26

 Here is the 3-15-26 Force of Infection newsletter from Dr. Caitlin Rivers:

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RSV is peaking later than usual this year

Flu is declining, norovirus hits a new high, and measles cases pass 1,300

Respiratory Diseases

Influenza-like illness

Flu season is still dragging on, but indicators are moving in the right direction. Two more states have moved out of high and very high activity levels—39 jurisdictions are now at moderate, low or minimal activity, compared to 37 last week.

Visits to the doctor for influenza-like illness (that is, fever and cough or sore throat) decreased this week to 3.7%. We are getting closer to, but are still above, the baseline of 3.1%. Once we drop below that, we will have hit the end of flu season.

Outpatient influenza-like illness held roughly steady for the youngest age groups this week, at 10.3% for those aged 0-4 and 7.4% for those aged 5-24. It decreased slightly for all other ages, with all at or below 3%.

More severe illness remains moderate, but is also declining. ED visits decreased slightly to 2.4% this week. Hospitalizations also decreased, to 2.1 hospitalizations per 100,000 people.

This flu season has been particularly rough for children. Interim assessments by the CDC categorize this season as moderate for adults and older adults, and severe for children. The cumulative hospitalization rate for children is the second highest it has been since the 2010-2011 flu season.

Flu B continues its rise, accounting for 73% of clinical lab samples and 40% of public lab samples.


COVID-19

Covid-19 activity is pretty low and continuing to decline further. The Center for Forecasting and Outbreak Analytics estimates that in most states, Covid-19 is likely declining (i.e., that the reproductive rate is <1).

ED visits held steady at a low 0.5% nationally. Covid-19 is sending slightly higher numbers of people to the ED in the South and Midwest (~0.6%) and wastewater activity in both regions is moderate. Activity remains lowest in the West, with ED visits a bit under 0.4% and very low wastewater activity. The Northeast is right in between.

Hospitalizations have been gently declining since the beginning of January, and are now down to a low 1.0 hospitalizations per 100,000 people.


RSV & Other Bugs

RSV: RSV was very slow to ramp up this year, which means we are seeing peak season quite a bit later than we usually do. We are just now reaching the levels of activity we typically see in late December/early January.

However, it does appear that we may have peaked. Test positivity dipped slightly this week to 8.6%. While ED visits held roughly steady at a moderate 0.5% for the total population, rates decreased slightly for the youngest age groups. They dipped to 4.7% for those <1 year, and to 4.0% for those 1-4 years old.

Similarly, hospitalizations decreased slightly to 2.8 hospitalizations per 100,000 people. There was a steep drop in hospitalization for babies (<1 year), dropping from 39 to 27.4 hospitalizations per 100,000 this past week. Hospitalizations also decreased several points for those 1-4 years of age, decreasing to 11.6.

Other Bugs: Cold season is not over either.

  • Human coronaviruses remain very high.

  • Human metapneumovirus continues its upward climb, though the rate is slowing, suggesting we are nearing peak.

  • Adenovirus is spreading at moderate-to-high levels.

  • Parainfluenza and rhinoviruses/enteroviruses remain very low.


Norovirus

Norovirus continues to ratchet up, reaching a new peak for the season: 16.4% test positivity. Every region reported high or very high and rising rates this week.

Stomach bugs spread extremely easily. You can reduce your risk of becoming infected by washing your hands with soap and water regularly, avoiding touching your face, and avoiding communal food (e.g., bowls of nuts and candy).

If someone in your household becomes ill, clean hard surfaces with soap and water, or with a diluted bleach solution; use the sanitizing cycle on a dishwasher to wash dishes; and wash and dry clothes and linens at the highest possible heat setting.

Norovirus continues to spread very effectively for a few days after symptoms stop, so it is best to stay home and avoid preparing food or drinks for others for at least 2-3 days after you start to feel a bit better.


Food recalls

The following foods are being recalled because they are contaminated. Please check your cupboards and throw out any of these items:

New:

  • Nothing new this week

Previously Reported:

  • Expanded recall of frozen chicken fried rice products, sold under multiple brand names: Trader Joe’s, Ajinomoto, Kroger, Ling Ling, and Tai Pei, due to possible glass shards (more info)

  • Great Value (sold at Walmart) Cottage Cheese (more info)

  • Elite Treats Chicken Chips (for dogs). These may be contaminated with salmonella, which poses a health risk not only for dogs, but also for humans who handle the product or contaminated surfaces (more info).

  • Bremer Family Size Italian Meatballs (frozen, ready-to-eat) (more info)

  • Multiple flavors of cream cheese under the Made Fresh Salads, Inc. label (more info)

  • Gerber Arrowroot biscuits (more info)

  • Organic chia seeds sold by Navitas Organics (more info)


In other news

  • Regional editions are wrapping up for the season. The last state-level edition will publish March 22, with regional coverage resuming in October when flu season resumes. In the meantime, paid subscribers will continue to receive a weekly national report through the summer months, which matters more than it might sound, as Covid-19 tends to surge in summer. Free subscribers will receive occasional essays through the summer months.

  • How effective were the flu vaccines this year? CDC recently published an interim assessment of flu vaccine effectiveness for this season (2025-2026) in the US.

    • For children between 6 months and 18 years, the seasonal flu vaccine was 38-41% effective against outpatient visits and 41% effective against hospitalization. For adults, the vaccine was 22-34% effective against outpatient visits, and 30% effective against hospitalization.

    • This level of vaccine effectiveness is fairly average, but a bit on the lower end. This is likely because there was a bit of a mismatch between the circulating strains and the strains selected for the vaccine. When season flu vaccines are made each year, there is a bit of guesswork involved to try to select strains that will be most common the coming season. This year, the match was not great owing to the emergence and subsequent dominance of H3N2 subclade K.

  • FDA expands approval for RSV vaccine to include younger adults at high risk. Arexvy was previously approved for use in older adults. The FDA has now approved the use of Arexvy (produced by GSK) for adults 18-49 who are at increased risk of lower respiratory tract disease due to RSV. Examples of people at higher risk include those with heart disease, asthma, COPD, cystic fibrosis or other lung diseases, chronic heart failure, diabetes, or chronic kidney disease.

  • Measles spread continues. There have been 1,362 cases of confirmed measles so far this year in the US, across 31 states. I write regularly about the importance of achieving high (>95%) rates of vaccination to stop community spread and achieve herd immunity. Herd immunity protects everyone, including the most vulnerable to severe illness: infants who are too young to be vaccinated, individuals who cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons (such as an allergy), or immunocompromised individuals who have been vaccinated but do not have adequate immune protection. A recent story published by ABC News about Makayla Skjerva, a 14-year-old girl from North Dakota, highlights the risks that losing herd immunity poses to immunocompromised individuals. Despite being fully vaccinated, Makayla became severely ill after a measles exposure at her school, eventually needing intensive care and a respirator. She was so sick that doctors advised her family to say their goodbyes. Fortunately, she survived, but was hospitalized for weeks, is still recovering her ability to walk, and has not yet returned to in-person schooling.

Dr Ruth Report, 3-15-26

Here's the March 15, 2026 newsletter by Dr. Ruth Ann Crystal. As usual, there's a ton of important medical information you and your family can use.

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Dr. Ruth Report, 3/15/26

COVID levels are decreasing across the United States as this wave slowly comes to its end. RSV is still high in most places, with especially high levels in the Northeast and Midwest. Influenza A has decreased nationally, but Flu B is still high particularly in the Northeast and Midwest.

In California, RSV activity remains elevated and the state has extended recommendations for monoclonal antibody protection (nirsevimab and clesrovimab) for eligible infants through April 30, 2026, with continued insurance coverage. Seasonal flu is still circulating in the state. Flu vaccination, testing, and early treatment are recommended to prevent severe disease. COVID activity is currently very low statewide.

Regional wastewater levels for COVID, RSV, Flu A, Flu B.

From: https://data.wastewaterscan.org/

Spring flowers mean that pollen counts are increasing in many places across the country with the warmest climates seeing the highest pollen levels now.

From: Pollen.com

This week’s unusual weather might change this, of course, as we expect an arctic blast to dump snow on the East coast and a heat wave on the West coast of the US, with damaging winds and potential tornadoes in the South/Midwest.

Expected Precipitation over the next 7 days

From: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/#

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Flu

The flu season is finally starting to wind down after a fairly long plateau. Most cases are from Influenza B at this time. Children younger than 18 years have had the second highest hospitalization rate for that age group since the 2010-2011 season.

COVID

COVID in wastewater is more moderate now, as the long winter wave starts to resolve. The midwest and northeast are still most affected.

From: https://data.wastewaterscan.org/

Acute COVID infections, General COVID info

Using medical records from more than 76 million adults, University of Virginia researchers show that “severe COVID-19 is associated with an increased subsequent lung cancer risk” in humans. Across several mouse models, the group also showed that prior viral pneumonia from COVID or influenza can turn on genes leading to a pro-cancer lung environment. However, blocking CXCR2 which recruits neutrophils plus PD-L1 blockade medications in mice enhanced T cell function and suppressed post-viral tumor growth.

From: https://www.cell.com/cell/abstract/S0092-8674(26)00220-5

Duke and Fred Hutchinson researchers followed 259 adults recovering from COVID infection and found that people who cleared SARS-CoV-2 within 21 days mounted a more coordinated immune response: their antibodies, T cells, and immune effector functions all worked together as a system. Longer viral shedding was linked to a less synchronized defense, which suggests immune coordination may help determine how long viral material lingers after infection.

Social and Advocacy

The Sick Times featured an article on how many Long COVID clinics, including the University of North Carolina clinic, are closing and are leaving thousands of complex patients without specialized care.

Long COVID

Today, March 15, is Long COVID Awareness Day and tonight, landmarks from around the world will be lit up teal to bring attention to Long COVID. It has been 6 years since the beginning of the COVID pandemic.

From: https://www.longcfoundation.org/lit-for-long-covid

This week RTHM and the Patient-Led Research Collaborative released their new Long COVID Treatment Guide with helpful information on medications, supplements and OTC drugs, lifestyle strategies like pacing, and procedures such as the Stellate Ganglion Block to help treat Long COVID symptoms.

In a small proof-of-concept study, UCSF tested AER002, a monoclonal antibody (mAb) against SARS-CoV-2, in 36 Long COVID patients randomized 2:1 to treatment versus placebo. The drug was safe and well-tolerated, but showed no significant improvement over placebo in physical health, quality of life, cognition, or biomarkers at 90 days. A post-hoc signal did emerge showing that participants with lower baseline SARS-CoV-2 antibodies and higher drug exposure were more likely to report improvement. The trial suggests that clearing lingering SARS-2 virus may require different approaches such as using multiple doses of mAbs, the use of different mAbs, or combination therapy with several antivirals may be key. Another study by Dr. Nancy Klimas, using one dose of a mAb Sipavibart, with the possibility of a second dose 6 months later, has started enrollment. It will be very interesting to see those results, although I believe that controlling SARS-CoV-2 viral persistence in Long COVID may require longer courses of combination antivirals, similar to the multidrug regimens used to treat HIV.

A preprint from the J. Craig Venter Institute and Mount Sinai found SARS-CoV-2 spike protein persisting in gut tissue of both Long COVID patients and healthy controls, but with a key difference: in Long COVID patients, more spike protein was noted and the spike-positive areas showed abnormal immune cell accumulation and overactive inflammation, while the same areas around spike protein in the tissues of healthy controls were immunologically quiet (inert). The findings support viral persistence as a driver of Long COVID and suggest that treatments targeting residual spike protein in tissues may be essential.

When China lifted its zero-COVID policy in late 2022, virtually the entire population was infected with Omicron simultaneously, creating a rare natural experiment. Shandong University researchers analyzed immune cell data from 40,537 patients and found that CD8 T cells remained 10% below pre-COVID baseline at 20 months, while patients with cardiovascular disease fared far worse, with T lymphocytes still 73% below baseline at 20 months. The authors concluded that their findings “redefine SARS-CoV-2 infection as a condition of long-lasting immune compromise.

From: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1201971225005090#fig0006

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Researchers at the Medical University of Innsbruck retrospectively examined 840 Long COVID patients and found two overlapping problems: microclots (microaggregates) large enough to block small blood vessels in 40% of patients, and the reactivation of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Chart review showed that platelet-inhibiting drugs (blood thinners) produced clinical improvement in a large number of patients and that outcomes were even better when EBV was simultaneously treated with antivirals like valacyclovir.

A University of Alberta review found that Long COVID patients have significantly lower plasma taurine levels than fully recovered individuals. Taurine, an amino acid with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, is naturally elevated during COVID recovery. In other medical conditions with symptoms that overlap with Long COVID, taurine improved blood sugar, lipid profiles, blood pressure, and exercise capacity, though it had no effect on cognition. A daily dose of 3,000 mg appears optimal, though caution should be used since taurine may interact with antidepressants, antiseizure drugs, blood thinners, and statins. Taurine has not yet been tested in Long COVID patients- this review extrapolates possible benefits from other diseases with similar symptoms.

From: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-026-13009-y

The University of Pittsburgh and collaborators used ultra high resolution 7T MRI to scan 179 adults across four US and UK medical centers, comparing 52 who had been hospitalized for severe COVID against 127 who had not. Previously hospitalized COVID patients showed smaller hippocampal volumes, lower plasma GFAP levels, and worse scores on memory and cognitive tests 19 months after discharge. White matter lesion burden was similar between the two groups, but in hospitalized patients those lesions correlated more strongly with poor cognition and elevated tau and amyloid biomarkers. The findings point to long lasting, measurable brain changes in people who had severe COVID infection.

Analyzing EHR data from 650,173 COVID-19 cases from U.S. military treatment facilities, researchers found that 42.8% (278,278 service members) developed post-COVID-19 syndrome. The most common symptoms were pulmonary (22.4%), neurological (14.6%), and fatigue (13.5%). Notably, cognitive symptoms affected only 3.7% of patients but persisted the longest of any symptom, raising particular concern for military readiness. Females, warrant officers, and Air Force personnel were disproportionately affected, and comorbidities such as obesity and anxiety significantly increased symptom odds.

A CDC analysis found about 6.6% of adults have Long COVID across 48 states, with higher rates in states that had more infections, more severe illness, and more chronic disease. States with higher COVID vaccination rates had lower Long COVID prevalence, suggesting vaccines can reduce population-level risk.

Measles

As of March 12, 2026, 1,362 confirmed measles cases were reported in the United States in 2026, with 5% (65 of 1362 cases) reported as hospitalized per the CDC.

As of March 13, 2026, the South Carolina Department of Public Health is reporting 996 cases of measles centered around Spartanburg County, SC.

As of March 10, 405 Utahns have been diagnosed with measles in this outbreak, with 98 of those cases reported in the last 3 weeks.

Government Health News

In Minnesota, increased ICE presence has led many undocumented immigrants to avoid going to hospitals and clinics for medical care out of fear of detention. In response, volunteer physicians, nurses, and community groups have organized informal networks to provide medical care through home visits, underground clinics, and trusted community sites. Similar underground clinics were organized in Los Angeles where a community health organization made home medical visits to roughly 2,000 immigrant families after appointment cancellations exceeded 30%.

An Illinois judge blocked the Trump administration from rescinding $600 million in public health funds from California, Colorado, Illinois, and Minnesota.

Other news

How do GLP-1 drugs work? Researchers at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California used mouse pancreatic islets and beta cell models to investigate how GLP-1 receptor agonists alter gene expression. They discovered that GLP-1 drugs activate the phosphorylation of the Med14 protein in pancreatic beta cells, activating gene programs that help the cells to survive longer, produce insulin, and better handle stress.

A new study shows that almost all adults over age 40 have some sort of rotator cuff abnormality on MRI. In a population-based study of 602 Finnish adults (ages 41 to 76) who underwent bilateral shoulder MRI, 98.7% had at least one rotator cuff abnormality: 25% tendinopathy, 62% partial-thickness tears, and 11% full-thickness tears. Critically, rotator cuff abnormalities were present in 96% of asymptomatic shoulders and 98% of symptomatic shoulders, with no significant difference after adjusting for relevant confounders. The authors concluded that these findings represent normal age-related changes rather than disease, and that routine MRI imaging should not guide diagnosis or treatment of atraumatic shoulder pain.

Antibiotic effects on the gut microbiome last longer than most people realize. A new study from Sweden of 14,979 adults shows that oral clindamycin, fluoroquinolones, and flucloxacillin altered 10-15% of gut bacterial species for up to 8 years after use. Penicillins and nitrofurantoin had a more limited impact.

With over 10,000 Americans on liver transplant waitlists and many too sick for surgery, MIT engineers developed an injectable alternative: liver cells (hepatocytes) mixed with hydrogel microspheres that self-assemble into “mini livers” inside the body and connect to nearby blood vessels. In mice, the cells remained viable and secreted key liver enzymes and proteins into the blood for eight weeks after injection. Immunosuppression is still required, but researchers are working toward a solution.

AI assistant bots are everywhere. But did you know that the Chipotle bot can help you with coding? Here is what happened when someone asked the Chipotle bot about python script:

Have a good week,

Ruth Ann Crystal MD

Saturday, March 14, 2026

An Evil Anti-Jewish, Pro-Iran Rally in New York City

What a sickening spectacle this was, a pro-Iran rally in New York City with professionally-printed signs and a great deal of hatred and incitement. Some of the footage was shown on the news, and it was hard to stomach.  If these terrorist sympathizers are pro-Iranian, then let them go to Iran permanently. We don't want or need them here.

Free speech is one thing. Calling for death to Israel and death to America in our own country while we're at war,  and during a week that already saw two terrorist attacks here, is simply beyond the pale.

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From The Times of Israel, 3-14-26'

Protesters chant for Hamas and Hezbollah at Al Quds Day rally in New York City
Anti-Zionist activists accuse Israel supporters of eating babies and raping children, shout ‘death to America,’ wave terrorist flags 

"NEW YORK — Anti-Zionist protesters chanted for terrorist groups, accused Israel’s supporters of eating babies and raping children, and chanted for death to Israel and the US at a protest for Al Quds Day in New York City on Friday.

"Al Quds Day is an annual, anti-Israel event held on the last Friday of Ramadan, established by Iran in 1979. The protest this year took place during heightened tensions due to the US-Israel war with Iran.

"The protest on Friday drew several hundred participants and was backed by leftist and anti-Zionist "activist groups, including Pal-Awda, the Bronx Anti-War Coalition and the Workers World Party.

“This Al Quds Day holds a special significance as the United States and its puppet Zionist regime wage full-out war against the Islamic Republic of Iran. We proclaim our support for the Islamic Republic,” a speaker said, introducing the event.

“Iran is the central pillar in the struggle against US imperialism and Zionism,” he said. “A war against the Islamic Republic of Iran is a war against anti-imperialism, against anti-occupation, against anti-freedom.”

“We remind the enemies that martyrdom is our highest honor and the targeting of the leader only strengthens the resolve,” he said. “We renew our pledge to the path of the martyrs.”

"The protesters held signs that said, “Victory to Palestinian and Iranian resistance,” “Free America from Israel,” and with pictures of the ayatollahs.

"Several signs said, “Israel weaker than a spider’s web,” referring to threats made by Hezbollah terror chief Hassan Nasrallah before Israel killed him. A child on the stage held up a photo of Iran’s late leader Ali Khamenei.

"Around a dozen pro-Israel counter-protesters, Jews and allies, gathered across the street, chanting, “USA,” and shouting, “brainwashed,” and “terrorists.”

"One of the speakers directed the anti-Zionist crowd to turn toward the pro-Israel group and led them in chants of, “Stop eating babies, stop raping children.”

"The allegation that Jews kill and consume children is based in the medieval, antisemitic blood libel that has ignited mass violence against Jews for centuries. Other anti-Zionist activists have also employed the libel against Israel and its supporters in recent months.

"The protesters also repeatedly referred to Jeffrey Epstein, with one protest leader referring to the US as the “Epstein-worshiping pedophile regime.”

"Other chants included, “Death to America, death to Israel” in Farsi, “We support Hamas here,” and, “Khaybar, khaybar,” a reference to an ancient Muslim victory over a Jewish tribe that is often seen as a threat of antisemitic violence. Several demonstrators shouted, “Khaybar, khayar, O Jews,” in Arabic.

"One woman waved a Hezbollah flag and another carried a flag for the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorist group.

"Another speaker described “Zionists” as “parasites that have taken over the host’s body.”

“They infiltrated the Oval Office, they infiltrated our legislature, they infiltrated our courts. They’re even trying to take ownership of our media. One single Zionist billionaire is taking ownership of TikTok,” she said.

"A speaker from the Bronx Anti-War Coalition heralded the “decolonization of West Asia” in the Iran war.

“This strategic earthquake was triggered by the heroic Al Aqsa Flood,” he said, a reference to the October 7, 2023, Hamas invasion of Israel.

“We honor the military prowess, the unbreakable spirit of our beloved commanders, martyr Yahya Sinwar, the lion of Gaza, Hassan Nasrallah, and all of the valiant commanders of the IRGC,” he said, to cheers and chants of “allahu akbar.” Sinwar was the late leader of the Hamas terrorist group and the IRGC is Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

“We stand on the brink of a decisive victory. Let us honor our martyrs, let us carry their rifle,” he said."

Dearborn, Michigan: A Microcosm of Rabid Jew-Hatred in America

I wouldn't exactly call this Jew-hatred "new", as it's been going on since way before the October 7 pogrom. But the media and social media have magnified it and normalized it. As for Michigan, Dearborn has had a bad reputation for years as an epicenter of blatant antisemitism, and of course the lovely Rashida Tlaib represents Dearborn in Congress.

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Michigan: a case study in the new Jew hatred

The attack on Temple Israel shows how lethal it is to censor discussion about Islamism.

Brendan O'Neill, Spiked, 3-13-26. 

"To see how the new Jew hatred grows, look no further than Dearborn, Michigan. To see how the Israelophobia of the mob fuses with the cowardice of the elites to unleash new waves of anti-Semitism, behold this city that borders Detroit. For the violent ramming of the Temple Israel synagogue in Michigan yesterday was more than racist violence – it was a case study in the new Jew hatred and who are its aiders and abetters.

"It was a horrific event. Ayman Mohamad Ghazali, 41, drove his car at speed into Temple Israel, a Reform synagogue in West Bloomfield, Michigan. There’s a pre-school there, too. Ghazali was armed and it is reported there was a large amount of explosives in his car. It seems clear his intention was to massacre Jews. Mercifully, his atrocity was intercepted by Temple Israel’s security guards. They opened fire and Ghazali’s body was later recovered from his burning vehicle.

"Ghazali was born in Lebanon and became a US citizen in 2016. It’s reported that members of his family were killed in an Israeli airstrike last month. No doubt some on the left will call his ramming of the synagogue ‘blowback’. They’ll pin it on Israel. The Zionist entity is endangering Jews around the world, they’ll say. It will be victim-blaming on steroids, that old Nazi canard that the Jews invite animus upon themselves through their wily, wicked behaviour.  

"A more pertinent fact is that Ghazali lived in the Dearborn area, near Detroit. He was reportedly based in Dearborn Heights, near Dearborn city. Dearborn has the highest concentration of Arab Americans of anywhere in the United States. It’s a city that has been rocked not only by orgies of Israelophobia – as have so many cities around the West – but also by open support for the armies of anti-Semites who dream of Israel’s annihilation. Mobs in Dearborn celebrated Hamas’s pogrom of 7 October 2023. ‘Michigan rally cheers Hamas attack’, as a local headline said.

"Dearborn has become a hotbed of the neo-jihadist imagination. The Hezbollah flag has flown there. There have been rallies for the theocratic regime in Iran. There have been street hollers of ‘Intifada, intifada’ and ‘America is a terrorist state’. Local radical imams pump out anti-Semitic invective. One told a mob of anti-Israel protesters that the ‘fire in our hearts… will burn that state until its demise’. Others have spoken of the need to ‘eradicate from existence’ that ‘sick, disgusting Zionist regime’

"Ahmad Musa Jibril, described by the Wall Street Journal as one of the ‘most influential English-speaking jihadi sheikhs’, is based in Dearborn. He giddily promotes ‘holy war’. An X account in his name called on Allah to ‘purify the [Holy Land] from the aggression of the apes, swines and hypocrites’ – ie, Jews. Suicidally, Dearborn ‘progressives’ have marched shoulder to shoulder with the radical religionists. Forswearing brunch to hit the streets in their mandatory keffiyehs, they’ve called for the very ‘intifada’ that would likely swallow up them and their gender-bending friends at some point.

"And yet, you call out Dearborn’s poisonous Islamist culture at your peril. When, in 2024, the Wall Street Journal described Dearborn as ‘America’s jihad capital’, it was roundly damned as ‘Islamophobic’. ‘Reckless. Bigoted. Islamophobic’, said Dearborn mayor Abdullah Hammoud. The then US president, Joe Biden, wrung his hands over ‘anti-Arab hate’. Thousands signed an online petition calling on the WSJ to retract its ‘Islamophobic’ hitjob.

"It was the clearest proof you could ask for that the role of the ‘Islamophobia’ slur is to strangle public discussion about Islamism. This is the ruthless suffocation of debate dolled up as ‘anti-racism’. Here we had a serious newspaper raising concerns about the anti-Jewish venom that can flow from the Islamist ideology, yet it was drowned out by wails of ‘Islamophobia!’. Behold the identitarian trump card – Islamist sensitivity, which smothers, every single time, your petty concerns about Jewish security.

"Dearborn is like a microcosm of the supine culture that has reigned in the post-7 October West. In the US, the UK and Europe, we’ve witnessed an explosion of the twin forces of Islamism and Islamo-censorship. We’ve seen mobs cheer anti-Semitic terrorism and wallow in the violent dream of Israel’s fiery demise. And yet you’re called ‘Islamophobic’ if you fret about it. Islamism is treated as a reasonable reaction to the behaviour of ‘the Zionist entity’ while concern about Islamism is damned as bigotry. These are Kafkaesque levels of moral deceit, where those of us worried about the rebirth of an ancient hatred are ourselves called ‘hateful’

"It remains to be seen what Ghazali thought he would achieve with his butchery at Temple Israel. Whether he fantasised that he was avenging Lebanon or whether his anti-Jewish animus flowed from the Islamist pox in Dearborn. Yet it is reasonable to ask if Dearborn’s virulent Israelophobia pushed this man deeper into the cesspit of anti-Jewish hate. A striking feature of our time is that leftists and liberals will always go looking for the ‘architecture of hatred’ that inspires racist attacks on blacks, Muslims or Latinos – but they never do that when there are attacks on Jews. In fact, they warn against it. Don’t ‘weaponise’ this attack by raising concerns about the broader public culture, they say. It’s only ever Jews who are accused of ‘weaponisation’ for wondering if their persecution might spring from social trends.

"Does the cultural elite really expect us to believe there’s no link between its own frothing hysteria over the Jewish State and the march of hostility against Jewish people? It’s a childish delusion, and a dangerous one, to think you can spend your every waking hour lamenting the supposedly unique cruelty of the world’s only Jewish nation and that there will be no consequences for Jews. The ceaseless libels against the Jewish homeland, the cries for more ‘intifada’ – these have consequences. You would think an activist class that says it’s vile bigotry to call ‘transwomen’ men would understand that the bourgeois clamour for the violent dismantling of the Jewish homeland is likely to entail blowback for Jewish people.

"This is why it’s sickening to hear the likes of New York mayor Zohran Mamdani mourn the events in Michigan. This is a man who refused to condemn the cry ‘Globalise the intifada’. This is a man whose wife liked Instagram posts celebrating an orgy of anti-Jewish violence far worse than Michigan’s – 7 October. Then there’s Zack Polanski, leader of the Green Party of England and Wales, wringing his hands over the ‘horrific news’ from Michigan. Mate, your deputy leader is a man who celebrated the pogrom of 7 October. A party that cheers the murder of Jews in Israel has no business lamenting the attempted murder of Jews in Michigan.

"Things are getting serious. Over the past week there have been violent incidents at synagogues in Liege in Belgium, in Toronto, and now Michigan. Violent Jew hate is spreading. And the first step to tackling it is to dismantle every snivelling effort to censor public concern. The Orwellian forces who call us bigots for speaking about bigotry need to be put back in their box. The stakes are too high for such slippery, tyrannical games."

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Brendan O’Neill is spiked’s chief political writer and host of the spiked podcast, The Brendan O’Neill Show. Subscribe to the podcast here. His new book, Vibe Shift: The Revolt Against Wokeness, Greenism and Technocracy, is out now. Find Brendan on Instagram: @burntoakboy.

Friday, March 13, 2026

Political Correctness Should Not Be Used To Explain Away Jew-Hatred & Jew-Murder

I despise Democrats and liberals. They can't bring themselves to refer to criminals and terrorists as criminals and terrorists, and they do everything to explain away the murders and attempted murders of Jews by terrorists. They also try to cover up the fact that the terrorists are Islamic supporters who worship Al Qaeda and Isis. Funny how it's okay for them to ignore that fact, but if YOU mention it, they call you "Islamophobic". 

I would think that every normal person suffers from some "Islamophobia" since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and even before that: after the bombing of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland; after the murder of Leon Klinghoffer; after the bombing of the Khobar Towers.  And every normal Jewish person has "Islamophobia" since the massacre of Jews in Israel by Hamas on Oct.7, 2023 and prior to that horror. "Islamophobia" is an excuse the Muslims use to explain away our outrage.  For us, it means hatred of Islamic terrorists. If you don't like it that we hate you, then stop committing terrorist attacks. It's as simple as that.

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If Jewish "progressives" had their way, scores of children would have been murdered at Temple Israel yesterday

From Elder of Ziyon, 3-13-26 
 
"From all reports of the horrific terror attack at Temple Israel in Michigan yesterday, a bloodbath was averted because of the professional, armed security that the synagogue had in place.

"In all likelihood this was partially funded, directly or indirectly through Jewish Federations, by the Department of Homeland Security. 

"But "progressive Jews" don't like synagogues to be protected by armed guards.

"An April 2024 open letter to Congress signed by pseudo-Jewish organizations like the Jewish Voice for Peace, IfNotNow, Bend the Arc, Jews For Racial & Economic Justice, Synagogues Rising and others insisted that the best way to protect synagogues - which, they claim, are only threated by white supremacy - is through "Community Based, Non-Carceral Approaches." 

"Their "plan" is to partner with other groups and somehow that would stop Hezbollah-aligned actors or Islamist terrorists from targeting Jews. 

"They call it "safety through solidarity."

"Really.

"Oh, by the way, they hate the word "terrorist" altogether, saying 
"We refuse to see our family members and friends (or anyone) labeled as “terrorists” or on the “path to radicalization.” We demand community-based, non-carceral safety approaches that leave no one in our communities behind, and actively challenge our society’s reliance on criminalization and surveillance."
"See? No one is a terrorist, they are just misunderstood well-meaning people. Including someone driving a car with bombs and guns into a synagogue and preschool.

"If only the guards gave Ayman Mohamad Ghazali flowers and an invitation to an iftar meal after he crashed into the building, all would have ended up well. How dare they use guns, treating him like a criminal!

"So when you see empty statements of sadness from JVP or Bend the Arc, remember - if Temple Israel had listened to them, there would have been carnage."

Falling Vaccination Rates = Outbreaks of Infectious Diseases

By Jennifer B. Nuzzo  & Andrea Uhlig at The Conversation, 3-12-26

We study pandemics, and the resurgence of measles is a grim sign of what’s coming

"In the three decades between 1993 and 2024, measles in the U.S. was relatively rare – a few hundred cases each year, at most. But suddenly, the disease has become so entrenched in American life that it sometimes fails to make headlines when a new outbreak erupts.

"As of March 2026, measles has been continuously circulating around the U.S. for more than a year, starting with an outbreak in Texas that lasted from January to August 2025. Before that outbreak was declared over, an outbreak on the Utah and Arizona border began in August and is ongoing. An outbreak in South Carolina began in September, drastically increased in January 2026, and continues.

"Thirty states have had measles cases this year; 47 have seen cases since the start of 2025. Health officials across the U.S. have confirmed 1,300 infections already this year as of March 6, putting the country on track to surpass 2025’s numbers, which were the highest in 35 years.

"We study outbreak preparedness and response at Brown University’s Pandemic Center, and we view the return of measles in the U.S. as a grim signal of what’s to come.

"Low levels of vaccination across the country mean measles outbreaks will continue to occur, needlessly hospitalizing and killing the unvaccinated. But beyond these harms, the disease’s resurgence serves as a serious warning about the country’s capacity to manage infectious disease threats of all kinds.

An eliminated disease returns

"Measles’ return is no mystery: At its root is the falling vaccination rate.

"Around 90% of the U.S. population has received the MMR vaccine, which protects against measles, mumps and rubella, and in some regions of the country, the rate is below 60%. Since about 2019-2020, that overall number has dropped below the 95% needed for herd immunity. It is necessary to keep that rate nationally, but maintaining herd immunity at the local level is equally important in order to prevent measles from finding pockets of unvaccinated communities. 

"Countries that remain free of continuous transmission for 12 months are deemed to have eliminated measles – a designation the U.S. achieved in 2000. The Pan American Health Organization was scheduled to decide in April whether the U.S. should lose that designation, but the organization postponed its meeting until November.

"Current trends suggest that both the U.S. and Mexico, which has also been battling the disease, may lose this status – as Canada did in November 2025. All three countries have seen their vaccination rates fall below the 95% threshold, and their outbreaks may share epidemiological links.

A serious, long-term threat to US health

"By any measure, the ongoing U.S. measles outbreaks signal that the disease has returned in a way that will have serious adverse health consequences. In 2025, three people died from measles in the U.S. That is more than in any year since the disease’s elimination 25 years ago.

"Of the country’s 2,283 confirmed measles cases in 2025, 11% were sick enough to be hospitalized. In South Carolina, where most measles cases have been reported in 2026, hospitals don’t have to report when patients are admitted due to measles complications, so the actual number of hospitalizations due to measles could be much higher.

"People who recover from measles can experience complications such as pneumonia, which can lead to death, or encephalitis, which can later lead to deafness or intellectual disabilities from the brain swelling. The virus can also affect the immune system, making people more susceptible to other infections over the long term, even ones they’ve had before.

"In rare instances – though more likely if someone is infected as a child – measles patients can develop a progressive dementia known as subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, or SSPE, anywhere from two to 10 years after their infection. SSPE always leads to death. This past year, a school-age child in Los Angeles died of this condition years after being infected with measles as an infant, before they were old enough to be vaccinated.

Measles is an economic scourge

"Recurring outbreaks of measles in the U.S. will mean high economic costs. Countries have pursued measles elimination in part because of the clear economic benefits of stopping domestic transmission of the virus.

"Studies have found that the cost of containing measles outbreaks is often as much as tens of thousands of dollars per case. One outbreak in Washington state in 2018-2019, which involved 72 cases – a small outbreak compared with what states are reporting now – cost US$3.2 million for the public health response, medical expenses and productivity losses. The Common Health Coalition found that a sustained 1% drop in MMR coverage would cost the U.S. billions across health care systems and the economy.

An opening for infectious disease

"As concerning as recent outbreaks of measles have been, they herald a larger systemic problem.

"How a country controls measles can be viewed as a proxy for how well it would control many other diseases. That’s because the steps for stopping the spread are the same: deploying vaccines to prevent infections, detecting and isolating cases when they occur, identifying exposed contacts of infected people and making sure they stay home if they’re likely to be contagious, and treating sick people safely.

"But besides measles, we’ve already seen infections that were once controlled, like whooping cough, that rose sharply in 2024 and remained high in 2025 compared with before the COVID-19 pandemic.

"That’s because controlling the spread of many infectious diseases depends on the public’s trust in the basic components of public health. Declining MMR vaccine coverage reveals underlying challenges in public support for vaccines. Public confidence in the current Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is also eroding, according to polling from 2023 to early 2026 by the health policy organization KFF. Less than half of the people polled trust the government even “a fair amount” to provide reliable vaccine information.

"These growing cracks in the country’s public health armor will complicate efforts to protect Americans from future disease threats – whether an outbreak, a pandemic or a biological attack."

Thursday, March 12, 2026

It's Time Once Again To Play "What's The Motive?"!

As soon as the TV news hosts started wondering what the motive could possibly be, I had to shut the TV off before I could kick it in.

Stop the innocent act. What is usually the motive when maniacs drive into synagogues and start shooting? It's Jew-hatred, in case people are really that clueless, it's nothing new, and it's been going on for years.

The shooter is dead, which is a relief.  Michigan was also the scene for a thwarted mass murder plot to kill Jews at an East Lansing synagogue in 2023.

------------------------------

Reports of active shooter at a Michigan synagogue prompt shelter-in-place orders
Smoke was seen coming from the building’s roof. Nearby schools and houses of worship were ordered to shelter in place, and Jewish organizations were told to lock down. 

"Michigan law enforcement agencies are responding to reports of an active shooter and car ramming at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, midday Thursday.

"Smoke could be seen billowing from the roof of the temple. Police have not confirmed whether shots have been fired, or if anyone has been injured. A law enforcement official told the Scripps News Group that temple security confronted a person, but that person has not been apprehended."