Sunday, May 24, 2026

Welles Crowther

It's been 25 years since September 11, but as soon I saw this headline, I knew it could only mean Welles Crowther,  one of the heroes of that horrific day. 

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Fox News, 5-22-26 

Trump announces highest civilian honor for 9/11 hero remembered as the 'Man in the Red Bandana'. 

'Welles' light still shines brightly,' his mother, Alison, said after Trump announced the posthumous honor at a Friday rally in New York

"President Donald Trump announced during a rally in New York that he was posthumously awarding the nation’s highest civilian honor to Welles Remy Crowther, the 9/11 hero remembered as the "Man in the Red Bandana" after he repeatedly led victims to safety from the burning South Tower before dying in the terrorist attacks.

"Trump revealed the Presidential Medal of Freedom honor during a Rockland County stop on Friday with Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., who had urged the president to recognize Crowther’s heroism ahead of the 25th anniversary of Sept. 11. Crowther, a 24-year-old equities trader who also worked as a volunteer firefighter, became a symbol of American courage after survivors recounted being guided through smoke and wreckage by a man wearing a red bandana over his face.

"At the request of Bruce, and Mike, and some of the political — great political people we have, and we are approaching the 25th anniversary of September 11th, 2001, a dark day that will live in infamy. We are posthumously awarding Welles the Presidential Medal of Freedom," Trump told the Rockland County crowd, earning a resounding applause.

"It's the highest award outside of the Congressional Medal of Honor — those are the two biggies and Welles has one of them. I just want to congratulate his great mother in doing a phenomenal job in raising that young man. Boy, what bravery, saved those people and became a legend in a sense, nobody else would have done what he did. So he's going to be getting the Presidential Medal of Freedom."

"The president subsequently brought up Welles' mother, Alison Crowther, who addressed the pro-Trump crowd momentarily, describing the award bestowed on her son as a "huge honor." 

"It's such a beautiful thing that even 25 years later, Welles' light still shines brightly," she told the crowd, noting she has traveled the world telling her son's story to places as far away as Jordan. Alison Crowther remarked that in these travels, when she tells children Welles' story, "They're tremendously moved and inspired ... to be better people."

"Welles, an equities trader who worked on the 104th floor of the South Tower, was in his office when the first aircraft hit the North Tower that morning. He left his mother a voicemail shortly after the towers were struck, letting her know he was okay, but his body was later found amid the rubble.

"According to the 9/11 Memorial & Museum, Welles "made three trips to the sky lobby, saving as many people as he could, until the burning building collapsed," with some reports indicating he saved up to 18 lives that day. As he did so, Welles covered his nose and mouth with a red bandana he kept at his desk.

"That red bandana is currently displayed at the 9/11 museum in New York City. The Tunnels to Towers Foundation, a nonprofit that supports first responders and their families, including those who became victims after 9/11, said Welles always kept a red bandana at his desk.

"The foundation recounted how, when he was asked why he always carried the red bandana, Welles replied: "With this red bandana, I’m going to change the world." His father, the foundation said, told Welles to always carry a red bandana on him for "messy jobs."

"People can live 100 years and not have the compassion, the wherewithal to do what he did," a survivor rescued by Crowther has said."

"President Trump: Please Do Not Leave the Iranian Regime in Place."

I completely agree with this article. I thought we should have kept bombing rather wasting time delaying over negotiations with an enemy that hates and wants to destroy both the United States and Israel.

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Gatestone Institute

President Trump: Please Do Not Leave the Iranian Regime in Place. We Waited More Than Four Decades for You, We Will Not Get Another Break

by Majid Rafizadeh, May 23, 2026 at 5:00 am 

"The Iranian regime is playing its game again: drag everything out to stay in power until the American public grows tired of high gasoline prices; or until the November midterm elections, when the Democrats might win; or until 2029 when President Donald J. Trump's term finally ends and he is replaced, with luck, by an invertebrate.

"Iran's regime has been using two tactics. It says: "We need time. We are, because of the strikes, fractured and our leadership divided." Or, as Vice President J.D. Vance naively noted on its behalf: it says it does not know what it wants. "The Iranians aren't themselves quite clear in what direction they want to go," Vance, with a straight face, told reporters at the White House; "they are also just a fractured country."

"That is exactly what the regime wants: that you are dumb enough to believe that. The Iranian regime knows precisely what it wants. It wants to stay in power to continue its anti-Americanism, anti-Semitism, anti-Westernism and anti-its-own-people-ism. The regime wants to revive its nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles programs; restore its terrorist proxies, Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis; try to create another noose of death around Israel; threaten Europe and eventually the United States; suppress, kill and execute its own people, and continue to export its fanatic ideology and Islamist revolution.

"The supposed "moderates" will say, " Oh please wait for us. We are so fractured! We just want to win over the hardliners -- and we are ALMOST there!" This dish has been served up for years. It works.

"The second ploy is "Drag, Drag, Drag." Drag the deals. Drag the talks. Drag the feedback. Drag the confusion. Or else: Put a deal out on the table and then take it back. Then put out another deal. Then another one. Before you know it, the West will be worn down.

"Please, President Trump: No president has ever had the courage to take action as you have done. You are different from everyone. It took more than four decades for someone like you to show up to save the world. Iran's regime has killed Americans, Arabs, Iranians. As the "top state sponsor of terrorism for 39 years in a row," Iran has been terrorizing half the planet.

"If this regime stays in power, essentially nothing has been accomplished. All that you have historically done will be for naught. If Iran's regime stays in power, it will break every agreement -- with full vengeance. The world cannot wait another 50 years hoping for maybe another President Trump.

"The regime -- with help from China, Russia, and North Korea -- will restart its nuclear program. It will impose tolls in the Strait of Hormuz. There will be no one with the guts to stop it. The regime will ramp up assassinations abroad, support its proxies, attack Israel more aggressively, and race again toward nuclear weapons.

"The regime is hoping to wait out your term.

"Please, President Trump, do not leave this regime in place or replace it with an equally brutal military one. Continue the economic pressure. Do not give the regime relief. Arm and support the Iranian people so they can stand up and not be rounded up, tortured and executed again. Do not listen to the liberal media outlets that are telling you to stop, de-escalate, or accept 20-year fake "moratoriums" or other idiotic half-measures.

"Your trusted "negotiator," Pakistan, is a long-time supporter of Iran (here, here, here and here). It wants to see the regime survive.

"President Trump: For the world, for humanity, for Western civilization, please do not leave this regime in place -- or a secular military one that is just as fierce. We cannot wait another 50 years for someone like you again."

Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a political scientist, Harvard-educated analyst, and board member of Harvard International Review. He has authored several books on the US foreign policy. He can be reached at dr.rafizadeh@post.harvard.edu

Bring Back Mental Institutions

How many more times can we deal with would-be assassins and other criminals roaming our streets  who all have the same "mental illness" excuse? Instead of worrying about the criminals' best interests, how about caring for the best interests of the rest of us -- including the fact that we don't want to be their victims!

Here's the latest one that caused panic on the White House grounds last evening, a day after the plot to kill Ivanka Trump was revealed:

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Fox News, 5-24-26 

White House gunman had criminal record, history of mental health issues
In July 2025 incident, Best 'claimed he was Jesus Christ and that he wanted to get arrested,' according to court filing

"The man fatally shot by Secret Service agents after authorities said he opened fire at a White House security checkpoint Saturday had a documented history of encounters with law enforcement and mental health concerns.

"Thank you to our great Secret Service and Law Enforcement for the swift and professional action taken this evening against a gunman near the White House, who had a violent history and possible obsession with our Country’s most cherished structure," President Donald Trump wrote early Sunday morning on Truth Social.

"The gunman is dead after an exchange of gunfire with Secret Service Agents near the White House gates."

"The dead gunman was identified as Nasire Best, a 21-year-old Maryland man, who was previously "known to United States Secret Service" around the White House complex, according to a July 2025 D.C. Superior Court filing. 

....

"Best approached a checkpoint near 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW shortly after 6 p.m. ET, pulled a gun from a bag and opened fire on Secret Service officers. Officers returned fire, striking Best, who was taken to a hospital and later died.

"A bystander was also wounded, though officials had not said who fired the round that struck that person or released the person’s condition. No Secret Service agents were injured. Trump was inside the White House at the time and was briefed on the shooting

"His overnight post added a call for White House security, which is being removed from the Senate's now-stalled budget reconciliation package.

"This event is one month removed from the White House Correspondent’s Dinner shooting, and goes to show how important it is, for all future Presidents, to get, what will be, the most safe and secure space of its kind ever built in Washington, D.C.," Trump's post concluded. "The National Security of our Country demands it!"

Saturday, May 23, 2026

We Need More RSV Awareness

This is a very good op-ed. I knew that seniors over 75 should get the RSV vaccine, but other than that,, I rarely hear or read anything about this respiratory virus.  I hope that changes.

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CIDRAP Op-Ed: "RSV—the middle child of respiratory season who deserves more attention"

Jess Steier, DrPh, May 19, 2026

My mother called me from the pharmacy last fall. "Jessy, is this something I need to get? I saw it at the counter, but I haven't heard anything about it."

She was talking about the RSV (respiratory syncytial virus) vaccine. She is in her seventies, immunocompetent, and has a daughter with a doctorate in public health. If anyone in the country should have heard about the vaccine by now, it is my mother. And yet there she was in the CVS aisle, calling me to ask if she should get it.

From the looks of the data, she isn't an outlier.

The three respiratory virus vaccines we now have all face barriers, and the barriers are not the same. The flu vaccine fights "it's just the flu," and a recurring suspicion that it's not worth the trouble because its effectiveness varies year to year, depending on how well it matches circulating strains. (For the record: even a moderately matched flu vaccine running at 40% is meaningfully better than zero.) The COVID vaccine fights distrust, much of it inherited from a rollout that looked rushed because the vaccine trials ran in parallel rather than sequentially, even though the rigor was the same

Widespread unawareness

The RSV vaccine is different. It does not have a reputation problem or a trust problem. It has an awareness problem. Most people do not know what RSV is, do not know they are at risk, and do not know there is something they can do about it. It is the middle child of respiratory season, the one we keep forgetting is in the room.

In a recent international survey of adults 50 and older across four countries, only 40% had heard of RSV. In the US, a survey of adults 60 and older and adults with chronic heart, lung, or metabolic conditions found that only 43% had heard of RSV, and among those who had, only about a third felt they knew much about the disease. Numbers like these would be unthinkable for the other two.

State and local health departments have been working hard on RSV awareness, often with shoestring budgets and shrinking staff. Federal funding has pulled back, trusted institutions have been destabilized, and the basic premise of vaccine recommendation has come under public attack. The fact that uptake has nonetheless climbed is a testament to those state and local efforts, though the numbers make clear how much ground remains. 

The awareness gap shows up in uptake. The RSV vaccine is currently recommended for all adults 75 and older, and for adults 50 to 74 at increased risk of severe disease, a group that includes anyone with conditions like heart disease, chronic lung disease, diabetes with end-organ damage, or severe obesity. Yet the most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) show that, as of January 2026,RSV vaccination is 40.9% among adults 75 and older and 30.9% among adults 50 to 74 years old who are at increased risk. 

That is real progress from the 16 percent of adults 60 and older who had received the RSV vaccine across the first two seasons it was available, but it still trails the flu vaccination rate, which sits at 63.8% in adults 65 and over, even after several years of decline. We shouldn't be surprised that a vaccine that has been on the market for two seasons hasn't yet caught up to a mature, century-old vaccination program, but that doesn't mean the gap is acceptable. 

RSV is not new. Pediatricians have known for decades that it is the leading cause of infant hospitalization in the United States. The number one cause. But that familiarity lived entirely within pediatric medicine. In adults, RSV went largely undetected and unnamed until we started testing for it.

We could prevent scores of hospitalizations

What we found when we started testing was sobering. CDC estimates that RSV causes about 110,000 to 180,000 hospitalizations every year among adults 50 and older in the United States. For years, those patients were diagnosed as having viral pneumonia or sent home with a vague label of "respiratory infection." There is still no antiviral for RSV, so supportive care is all we have on the back end, which is why the prevention tools we now have on the front end matter so much.

The pediatric story is more complicated, and that complication is part of the problem. We have two prevention pathways for infants, which is good news but also a source of confusion. The first is maternal vaccination with Abrysvo, given to pregnant women from 32 to 36 weeks of gestation, which transfers protective antibodies across the placenta. The second is a long-acting monoclonal antibody, nirsevimab or the newly approved clesrovimab, given directly to infants who were not protected through maternal vaccination. 

Most babies need one or the other, not both, but the existence of both gives families two opportunities to opt in to protection. Some parents will prefer the maternal route and want their baby born already covered. Some will prefer nirsevimab, either because they did not vaccinate during pregnancy or because they would rather their infant receive the immunization directly. Either choice protects the baby.

Both tools are recent. Neither existed when my kids were born in 2016 and 2018, but I would have taken either one if they had been.

Modeling suggests that if RSV vaccine uptake matched flu vaccine uptake, we could prevent up to 60% of RSV hospitalizations and deaths in older adults in a single season. The tools deserve more than they have gotten. Real-world studies find RSV vaccines to be 73% to 83% effective against RSV-associated hospitalization in older adults, with protection holding through a second season for some vaccines. Abrysvo cuts neonatal RSV hospitalization by roughly two-thirds. Nirsevimab, based on data from the 2024-25 season, is around 80% effective against RSV-associated hospitalizations in infants. Whatever the awareness problem is, it is not a "the product doesn't work" problem.

CDC analysis drawing from immunization information systems across 33 states and Washington, DC, found that only 29% of infants born during the 2023-24 respiratory season were protected against RSV through either pathway, with state-level coverage ranging from 11% in Nevada to 53% in Vermont. The geographic spread tells you the system is not failing uniformly. It is failing where infrastructure and access are thinnest, in the same patterns we see for every other vaccine. 

Preliminary data from the 2024-25 season suggest national coverage among infants younger than 8 months, through maternal vaccination or nirsevimab, increased to about 57%, which is real progress but still leaves more than four in ten American infants unprotected against the leading cause of infant hospitalization in the United States.

Need for ‘one-and-done’ messaging

One important difference between RSV and flu vaccination rarely gets mentioned. The flu and COVID vaccines are annual. The RSV vaccine is not. For now, it is a single dose, full stop. Surveillance is ongoing to determine whether revaccination will eventually be recommended, but, as of today, an eligible older adult who gets the shot has done the thing once and is done. That is an easier ask than an annual shot. "Get it once, and you are done" should be everywhere in the messaging right now, and it isn't.

You have to introduce a vaccine before you can defend it. That is a different kind of work than the one science communicators usually train for.

The flu vaccine's footprint took generations to build: seasonal campaigns, school messaging, workplace clinics, and the slow installation of "flu season" as a calendar event. The goal is not to take any of that down. The goal is to give the RSV vaccine the same kind of footprint, and to do it without a century to spare and without a pandemic to do the awareness-building for free.

The lever is the one we already have for flu. Bundle the conversations. Every flu shot for an eligible older adult should include mention of an RSV shot, including the part about it being one-and-done. Every prenatal visit at the right gestational window should include the maternal vaccine. Every birthing hospital should have a default workflow for nirsevimab when the pregnant woman has not received the vaccine. Obstetric and pediatric practices need handoff protocols, because pediatric problems are clinical workflow problems. 

Pharmacies are where adult vaccines are administered now, so that is where the conversation about older adults belongs. Public health departments need the resources to treat RSV vaccination the way they treat flu vaccination, with fall campaigns, school-adjacent messaging, and employer-facing nudges.

There are early signs that the catch-up is starting. RSV vaccine uptake among adults 75 and over has more than doubled over two seasons, and pharmacies are quietly stocking combination respiratory virus tests that screen for flu, COVID, and RSV in a single swab, which means more people will leave the pharmacy with a name for what they have. The disease is becoming legible, and the vaccine is following.

When my mother called me from the pharmacy, I told her yes. Get it. She is in the recommended age-group, the vaccine has held up well in trials and in real-world data, and the RSV season she would otherwise be unprotected through was starting to bear down on us.

She got the shot, and she is fine. Most people will never make that call because they do not have a daughter with a DrPH to ask. The work is making sure they do not need to.

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Dr. Steier is a public health scientist and scientific communicator. She is the founder of Unbiased Science, an organization that uses data visualizations, real-world analogies, and human voice to communicate complex scientific concepts for public understanding via multiple media modalities.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Reacting To Ebola & Hantavirus In The Age Of COVID

This is a very well-written article. For me, educating myself and reading all the COVID newsletters written by legitimate medical professionals helped me greatly during the early years of the pandemic. And I first read about Ebola in the late 90s when I read Richard Preston's powerful nonfiction book, "The Hot Zone".  

I think the conspiracy theorists don't read up on the things that affect us, and thanks to social media, the worst takes get accepted as fact.

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COVID is shaping Americans' reaction to Ebola and hantavirus

By Ava Berger, NPR, 5-21-26

"Global health emergencies are back in the headlines, with recent outbreaks of hantavirus on a cruise ship and Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

"The internet has responded accordingly, with the situation evoking painful reminders of COVID-19 for many people. Questions filled with fear have surfaced on Reddit, comedic videos are all over TikTok and Instagram, and search terms involving the word "pandemic" have increased on Google Trends in recent weeks.

"The COVID-19 pandemic introduced people across the U.S. to a global health emergency that they may have never imagined.

"That experience is coloring how some people are thinking about Ebola and hantavirus, public health and infectious disease experts say. Fear around exotic-sounding diseases has always existed, but now people know how a pandemic can change their life.

"As Chandra Harvey, a content creator on Instagram whose joking video about another possible pandemic received over 100,000 views, told NPR: "We're all dealing with PTSD from COVID."

"For Harvey, COVID-19 "heavily impacted" her family, with a few relatives hospitalized. "COVID scarred all of us," she said.

"Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, "you were worried about your friends and neighbors and loved ones dying from COVID," said Dr. Ali S. Khan, dean of the College of Public Health at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. More than 1 million Americans died of COVID-19.

"Despite Ebola currently spreading in parts of eastern Africa, infectious disease experts told NPR that the average American should not be concerned about Ebola or hantavirus becoming a repeat of COVID-19. 

"Here's what to know about how Ebola and hantavirus differ from COVID-19, as well as what people should keep in mind when reading alarming headlines or scrolling through social media.

The COVID-19 effect on Americans 

"There is the "dread factor" with certain diseases, said Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and an infectious disease physician. Even though far more people die from influenza on average every year than from Ebola, "certain diseases spark dread in people," he said.

"Harvey, the content creator, said hearing about two diseases back-to-back "jumped out" to her family.

"Ebola … with the combination of hantavirus at the same time, it's just like, it's too much," she said. "Any time you hear of anything from a virus perspective, it's just scary."

"Adalja said the memory of COVID-19 also causes Americans to lump outbreaks together.

"But the diseases spread differently. COVID-19 (like measles) can spread through the air. Ebola is typically spread through bodily fluids, such as vomit or blood. Hantavirus most often spreads to humans through contact with urine, feces or saliva from infected rodents, though one strain has been identified that can spread from person to person.

"The nuances of the biology of different pathogens, the trajectories of different outbreaks, that all gets lost because what [many people are] worried about is having a disruptive event like COVID upend their entire life," Adalja said.

"Some may also be alarmed about how deadly these diseases are and the lack of treatment options, as well as the coincidence that they both gained attention in the same month.

"Also, the delay in detecting the Ebola outbreak has made it harder to control the situation, infectious disease specialists told NPR. Dr. Craig Spencer, an associate professor of public health at Brown University and an emergency medicine physician with Brown's Pandemic Center, told NPR's A Martínez that the Trump administration's firing of staff at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the cutting of the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. withdrawal from the World Health Organization are having an impact on the current response in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

"In a statement to NPR on Monday, the State Department said it was "false to claim that the USAID reform has negatively impacted our ability to respond to Ebola," adding that funding and support to combat Ebola would continue.

"Caitlin Rivers, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins, said she's "very concerned about the Ebola outbreak as an epidemiologist."

"However, "I'm not worried as a mom, meaning I'm not expecting Ebola to influence my community or really the United States," said Rivers, who wrote the book Crisis Averted: The Hidden Science of Fighting Outbreaks. Similarly, public health officials say the risk to the general public from hantavirus is very low.

The larger context of pandemics 

"Pandemics and epidemics have been a part of American and global life for centuries, going back to ancient times.

"In the 20th century, flu pandemics dominated the years of 1918, 1957 and 1968. In this century, there have been notable outbreaks of SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome), the H1N1 flu virus (swine flu), the Zika virus, mpox and measles. Ebola has also had multiple outbreaks in the past few decades, with the one in 2014 killing more than 11,000 people.

"Humans have been fighting infectious diseases since they first evolved, Adalja said.

"Adalja said he puts the Ebola and hantavirus outbreaks into the larger history of pandemics, epidemics and outbreaks: "Not everything has the ability to be this disruptive force the way COVID was."

"[People] have to understand that pandemics have always been something that humans are going to face," Adalja said. "But science and technology and medicine, they offer us the ability to master these issues, to make them less impactful, to be proactive."

"Rivers, the epidemiologist, said that in her experience, a major outbreak of international attention happens about every two years.

"They're a lot more frequent than I think many people appreciate."

What to think about when you hear about a new disease

"Instead of immediately turning to dread, experts said, Americans can focus on targeted questions and stay informed with information from local, state and national health officials.

"Adalja said to ask: "Are people talking about this spreading the same way COVID does?" Similarly, Dr. Abraar Karan, an infectious disease physician and faculty member at Stanford University, thinks about personal risk: "Are [experts] talking about my individual risk, like me leaving my house and going to work and coming home?"

"Adalja also said to "be very wary of what you see on social media if it's not coming from an official press source, because there is a lot of disinformation being deliberately spread."

"Harvey, the Instagram influencer, said that since COVID-19, she calls herself the "hand-washing police." She carries hand sanitizer in her purse and constantly makes her son wash his hands. "A lot of those things became routines for us."

"Rivers said if people are worried, they can wear a mask and avoid crowded indoor spaces or, if available, vaccinate. "Focusing on those controllables can be helpful," she said."

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Despicable, Delusional Democrats & The Female Platner

The Democrats have a blatant Jew-hater named Maureen Galindo, and somehow they are blaming the Republicans for her latest remarks.

The gloves are off. Now candidates are open and brazen about their hatred of Jews and Israel, and we have to fight back. 

This antisemite, who is fighting for a seat in Congress, wants to turn an ICE center into "a prison for American Zionists". As one of those "American Zionists", I hope she loses her race and is never heard from again. I wish I could say the same for the awful AOC and Hakeem Jeffries.

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Fox News 5-20-26 

Dem candidate’s Zionist castration rant sparks firestorm as party leaders rewrite narrative to target GOP Democrat Maureen Galindo vowed to turn a local ICE facility into a prison for 'American Zionists and former ICE officer 

"Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and other Democrats responded to a Democratic congressional candidate’s "antisemitic" rant about jailing and castrating "American Zionists" by attempting to shift the blame to Republicans.

"After progressive Democrat Maureen Galindo stirred up a firestorm of controversy for pledging to open a "prison for American Zionists and former ICE officers," Jeffries and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) said in a joint statement that "MAGA extremists should be ashamed of themselves."

"Jeffries and the DCCC accused GOP leaders of backing Galindo, saying, "House Republican leadership must immediately cease propping up this antisemitic candidacy, pull spending in the race and forcefully condemn these comments."

"This vile language by her is disqualifying and has no place in American politics, and certainly not in the Democratic Party," Jeffries and the DCCC said in the statement, adding, "To embrace and uplift a fringe candidate with antisemitic — and extremely dangerous — rhetoric and views in order to win an election is beyond the pale."

"Texans will not be fooled and will reject her at the ballot box next week," they added.

"Galindo, who is currently locked in a primary runoff for a Texas congressional seat, is under fire after pledging in a social media post to turn a local ICE center into a "prison for American Zionists and former ICE officers." She also said in the post that the prison "will also be a castration processing center for pedophiles, which will probably be most of the Zionists."

"Earlier this month, the DCCC accused "Washington Republicans" of secretly contributing to Galindo’s campaign through dark money spending.

"Galindo and her primary opponent, Johnny Garcia, who has been endorsed by the DCCC, are set to face off in a runoff election next week. In their first matchup, Galindo had a narrow lead over Garcia, 29% to 27%, though neither candidate came close to clearing the 50% threshold required to win the nomination."

Your Local Epidemiologist, 5-20-26

Here's an excellent column  on how the huge crowds at the World Cup and other large events will be monitored for diseases that might affect Americans.

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World Cup’s hidden health operation: YLE behind the scenes

Katelyn Jetelina, May 20, 2026

"Every four years in ancient Greece, tens of thousands of people converged on Olympia for the Games. Athletes, merchants, politicians, and pilgrims came from across the Greek world, slept in makeshift camps, shared water from the same sources, and packed into the same dusty, sunbaked arena in the height of summer. There was no sanitation infrastructure and no concept of germ theory, so there were outbreaks of typhoid, dysentery, and salmonella, to name a few.

"There was also a massive fly problem. It was so severe that the Greeks made ritual sacrifices to a deity they called Zeus Apomyios (which meant Zeus Averter of Flies). Before the Games, they appealed to a god specifically designated to keep the insects away.

"The conditions were so notorious that ancient philosophers used them as a shorthand for human endurance. Epictetus asked his students: Are you not scorched? Are you not pressed by a crowd? Are you not without comfortable means of bathing? … Have you not abundance of noise, clamour, and other disagreeable things? But I suppose that setting all these things off against the magnificence of the spectacle, you bear and endure.

"The World Cup kicks off in less than a month. It will be a magnificent spectacle and, thankfully, we don’t have to sacrifice to Zeus, as public health has advanced enormously in the past century. But the underlying challenge hasn’t gone away.

"Here’s what’s happening in preparation and how you can get involved.

The world’s largest event

"More than 100 matches will be played across 16 cities in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico over 38 days. Travelers from more than 48 countries will be flying in to watch and celebrate, with an expected 1.5 million additional inbound trips to the country. People will fill stadiums, spill into surrounding neighborhoods, pack bars and parks, and use public transit.

A large crowd of people seated in a stadium
Photo by CHUTTERSNAP on Unsplash

"While this is a beautiful moment of celebration and the mixture of cultures, it brings enormous complexities to protecting the public’s health in two primary ways:

  1. The sheer number of humans. High density = amplification of disease spread. Also, an influx provides added stress to health systems, like more broken bones, more heat-related illnesses, more (possibly violent) injuries, etc. For example, below are medical encounters before and during the 2022 World Cup in Qatar; they surged.

  1. When people mix, diseases mix. New diseases could be introduced that we are not normally exposed to or immune to. A traveler from one region may carry a pathogen that’s routine back home but entirely novel to someone sitting next to them in the stands.

What are the diseases top of mind?

"Some disease modelers are hard at work examining more than 80 diseases, and only a few show excess risk. At the top of the watchlist this summer:

  1. Measles. This is surging in many parts of the world, and all it takes is one person to find a tightly knit, unvaccinated pocket to start measles spreading like wildfire.

  2. Dengue. The U.S. has mosquito populations capable of carrying the virus. We haven’t seen widespread domestic spread, but the combination of summer heat, outdoor crowds, and high travel volume creates conditions worth watching carefully, particularly in southern states like Florida, California, and Texas.

  3. High-consequence diseases. Many systems are gearing up to detect Ebola, hantavirus, and other rare pathogens. But the public risk remains low, including for Ebola, simply because of how the virus spreads (through direct contact with bodily fluids). It's worth remembering that the 2014 World Cup in Brazil coincided with the largest Ebola outbreak in history, and there was no outbreak there.

"Beyond infectious diseases, heat-related illness may be the least dramatic item on the list, but it’s probably the most reliable risk. Crowds plus sun plus summer temperatures plus physical exertion plus alcohol is a combination that sends people to emergency rooms every year.

So what’s the plan?

"Local and state health departments have been preparing. Many have activated their Emergency Operations Centers, which are the same command structures they use for natural events like hurricanes. Data systems are being tuned and tested to catch unusual signals early, before a cluster becomes an outbreak. Hospital systems are coordinating on surge capacity. Rapid response teams are on standby. Weekly coordination calls have already started in many jurisdictions.

"This local preparation is essential as they know their communities best. But given movement across state and international borders, a national bird’s-eye view is also necessary to stitch together a broad picture of health around the World Cup.

"One national effort in which YLE is playing a central role is the Health Security Operations Center. This will be held in person in Washington, DC, led by Dr. Rebecca Katz at Georgetown University. In normal times, this would reside within the federal government. This is the first-ever non-governmental operations center that brings together academic researchers, technology companies (like Verily and Samsung), and public health departments under one roof.

"This will act as an intelligence fusion center pulling in data from wastewater monitoring, hospitals, contextual sources, and social listening. All of these data systems are built as underlying infrastructure, so they can turn on a dime for many diseases. (For example, wastewater monitoring for hantavirus is already turned on.) The goal is rapid detection of emerging health threats, with warnings shared across jurisdictions as early as possible, so people can take the necessary action.

World Health Organization Operations Center during 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar. Source: WHO.

"YLE is charged with ensuring that the right information is delivered to the right people at the right time, so they can make the right decisions. This means leading information collection, social and media monitoring, “translation,” and dissemination.

What this means for you

"During the games, be aware of your surroundings, consider using DEET, drink plenty of water, and wear a seatbelt. A mask can help in very crowded indoor settings. I will be sure to bring you along for the ride with what we are seeing in the data and what it may mean for you.

"If you’re attending a game or live within 30 miles of a host city, we want to hear from you!

  • What you’d be doing: Taking a short weekly survey. It’s a few questions about what health topics are on your mind, what rumors or concerns you’re hearing, and what questions aren’t getting answered.

  • Why it matters: We will use your responses to directly address the questions and concerns most relevant to you in the Your Local Epidemiologist newsletter. We’ll also summarize the responses for our partners so that local health systems and governments can better address fan and community needs in real time.

  • Sign up here, and we’ll follow up with everything you need to get started.

2026 FIFA World Cup host cities. Source: Axios

Bottom line

"This summer, we will continue a tradition that has lasted for decades. Public health partners, and we will be watching the data carefully in the background so that millions of fans can be scorched, crowded, and thoroughly, joyfully present.

"Love, YLE"

Good Riddance, Rep. Massie, & Take Your Anti-Israel Sentiment With You

I honestly thought I had heard it wrong when Thomas Massie, in his classless concession speech last night, actually said he wanted to speak to winner Ed Gallrein, but "he was in Tel Aviv."

What a sore loser, and what a way to go, with the kind of gratuitous, antisemitic remarks he's known for. Why would you even say such things except to try to somehow blame your defeat on -- who else? -- the Jews and Israel.  

Below is coverage from The Times of Israel, where I went to confirm that what I had heard was indeed, sadly correct. 

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May 20, 2026 

Massie says he had to find primary winner ‘in Tel Aviv’ to concede race

"After being defeated in the GOP primary, US House Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky tells supporters that he would’ve announced his concession sooner but he first called his opponent “and it took a while to find Ed Gallrein in Tel Aviv.”

"He also claims in his concession speech that young voters are still on his side.

“People that want somebody that will go along to get along, I’ve never heard of that strategy but that seems to be what the voters want,” Massie says. “But not the young voters.”

"The crowd is still energetic despite Massie’s loss, and starts a chant of “No more wars!” that the congressman joins in on. Massie’s speech meanders through different topics and touches on other politicians before another chant start of “America First!”

"In a short speech, Gallrein pledges to take the party’s agenda to Washington and work closely with US President Donald Trump. His victory speech lasts around five minutes.

“We have a saying on the family farm that it’s a contact sport,” Gallrein says. “I can tell you that campaigning is one as well folks.”

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Hurry And Capture This Traitor!

This news is sickening. You see how decent Iranians are being tortured and killed, and many more would love to be able to come to the United States to start a new life. 

Then there's this traitor, selling American secrets to Iran. I hope she is finally caught and prosecuted to the fullest degree. She deserves no sympathy whatsoever.

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FBI Offers $200K Reward for Iran Defector Monica Witt — Former U.S. Counterintelligence Specialist Accused of Betraying America Still on the Run

by Jim Hᴏft at The Gateway Pundir, May. 16, 2026 12:40 pm

FBI wanted poster for Monica Elfriede Witt, accused of conspiracy to deliver national defense information to foreign representatives.
Screenshot

"The FBI is ramping up its hunt for accused traitor and former U.S. Air Force counterintelligence specialist Monica Witt, announcing a massive $200,000 reward for information leading to her arrest and prosecution after years on the run in Iran.

"Witt, a former Air Force special agent trained in Farsi and entrusted with highly sensitive national security information, was indicted in 2019 on espionage charges after allegedly defecting to Iran and handing classified intelligence to the hostile Islamic regime.

"According to federal authorities, Witt served in the Air Force from 1997 to 2008 and later worked as a Defense Department contractor with access to secret and top-secret intelligence programs, including the identities of undercover American intelligence personnel.

"The FBI now believes she may still be actively assisting Iranian intelligence operations.

"In a statement this week, FBI Washington Field Office Counterintelligence and Cyber Division chief Daniel Wierzbicki blasted Witt for allegedly turning against her own country.

“Witt allegedly betrayed her oath to the Constitution more than a decade ago by defecting to Iran and providing the Iranian regime National Defense Information,” Wierzbicki said, adding that the FBI believes she “likely continues to support their nefarious activities.”

"Federal investigators say Witt attended anti-American conferences in Iran before ultimately defecting in 2013. Prosecutors allege she helped Iranian operatives identify and target her former U.S. intelligence colleagues and exposed a highly classified American intelligence program.

"Read the press release below:"

"The FBI Washington Field Office today announced that the FBI is offering a $200,000 reward for information leading to the apprehension and prosecution of Monica Witt, a former U.S. service member and counterintelligence agent who was indicted by a federal grand jury in the District of Columbia in February 2019 on charges of espionage, including transmitting national defense information to the government of Iran. 

"Witt, a former active-duty U.S. Air Force intelligence specialist and special agent for the Air Force Office of Special Investigations, served in the military between 1997 and 2008 before working as a U.S. government contractor until 2010. Her military service and contracting employment provided her access to SECRET and TOP SECRET information relating to foreign intelligence and counterintelligence, including the true names of U.S. Intelligence Community undercover personnel.

"In 2013, Witt defected to Iran. According to the indictment, she subsequently provided information to the government of Iran, placing at risk sensitive and classified U.S. national defense information and programs. Witt allegedly intentionally provided information endangering U.S personnel and their families stationed abroad. She also allegedly conducted research on behalf of the Iranian regime to allow them to target her former colleagues in the U.S. government.

"Witt’s defection to Iran has benefitted the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which has elements responsible for intelligence collection, unconventional warfare, and providing direct support to multiple terrorist organizations targeting U.S. citizens and interests.

"While Witt has been indicted for her alleged crimes, she remains at large. The FBI continues to actively work to locate Witt and bring her to justice.

Monica Witt allegedly betrayed her oath to the Constitution more than a decade ago by defecting to Iran and providing the Iranian regime National Defense Information and likely continues to support their nefarious activities,” said Daniel Wierzbicki, special agent in charge of the FBI Washington Field Office’s Counterintelligence and Cyber Division. “The FBI has not forgotten and believes that during this critical moment in Iran’s history, there is someone who knows something about her whereabouts. The FBI wants to hear from you so you can help us apprehend Witt and bring her to justice.” 

Your Local Epidemiologist - The Dose, 5-19-26

If you don't know about Ebola, you should. I read "The Hot Zone" in the 90s and never forgot it.  I've seen too many conspiracy theorists downplaying this horrific disease lately, and it makes me angry. Dr. Katelyn Jetelina has more information for you below.

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Ebola international emergency, hantavirus update, ticks, heat, opioid deaths decline, and more. The Dose (May 19)

"Mother Nature seems mad at us. Or perhaps, rather, this is what happens when we dismantle public health systems. Diseases thrive when humans are most vulnerable, and now we have two diseases of high consequence in the news: hantavirus and Ebola.

"That’s on top of tick season peaking and heat-related illnesses entering the picture. I end with some good news and a poll.

"Here’s what’s going on and what it means for you and your health.


In case you missed it: NYT op ed

"Last week, I wrote for the Times and, to my surprise, didn’t combust from nervousness.

"It’s time to stop playing games and speak truth to power. The public deserves stronger, better systems. That’s not created by performative headlines or destruction alone; it also means not going back to 2019.

Here’s a gift link.


Disease weather report

Hantavirus update

"The outbreak remains contained, and 41 people are being actively monitored in the U.S. Risk remains low for reasons previously covered.

"A few updates:

  1. People shuffling. The three people in biocontainment units (hospital-level setting) were moved to the Nebraska quarantine center (more like an isolated dorm room). All three tested negative, even the doctor who had a “mild positive.” It’s a telling sign of just how hard it is for this virus to spread; the doctor was treating infected patients on the cruise ship with very little PPE.

  2. Are those in Nebraska able to go home? The federal government is forcing them to stay until the end of the month, even though some want to quarantine at home. This is pretty darn hypocritical given the administration’s medical freedom movement.

Hantavirus update. Purple = change since last week. Figure created by Your Local Epidemiologist.

"Countdown to mid-June. We’re in a waiting game to see if the outbreak grows. The 42-day quarantine clock starts from last exposure and CDC is assuming that was the day passengers arrived in Nebraska. The median infection window is 18 days, which is an intermediate target for good news.

Figure by Your Local Epidemiologist

What this means for you: Unless you’re a passenger or were alerted by health officials of a contact, your risk is essentially zero.

Ticks still ticking, but did they peak?

"We are in peak tick season, especially in the Midwest and Northeast, where ~110 per 100,000 people visit emergency departments for tick bites.

"But we may have already peaked, which is 5 weeks earlier than previous years. Whether this season is just early or will stretch on unusually long, time will tell.

Data from CDC; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist.

Heat: Introducing a new section

"Heat risk peaks today across Texas and the Northeast, then eases later in the week.

"Heat sends more people to the ER with heat stroke, asthma attacks, dehydration, and heart problems. While relatively rare, it can also lead to death, which has increased over the past decade with more extreme heat. An increase in deaths outside largely drives this pattern. Indoor deaths are mostly among those without a working AC.

"The real danger is heat imbalance. That’s when your body produces more heat than it can release. Normally, sweat helps cool us down. But when it’s hot and humid, sweat doesn’t evaporate as easily. The air is already saturated with moisture, making it harder for your body to cool itself and increasing the risk of illness.

"Some federal tools were dismantled in 2025, but the NOAA-CDC HeatRisk tool remains active. This tool:

  • Offers hyperlocal risk forecasts up to 7 days ahead.

  • Rates conditions from “No Risk” to “Extreme” by considering temperatures, humidity, and other factors.

  • Provides an action: what you and your family can do to be protected.

What this means for you: Over the summer, be sure to check the HeatRisk tool.* A red day isn’t the best day for that soccer game for a kid with asthma, and a stretch of orange days is a great time to check on your elderly neighbor.

*Disclosure: I helped build this tool as a Senior Advisor to CDC.


Spotlight: Ebola outbreak

"A concerning Ebola outbreak is unfolding in Central Africa. This remains a very low risk to those in the U.S., but the WHO just declared it a public health emergency of international concern. Over 340 suspected cases and 100 deaths have been reported, and now there is a travel ban from three countries.

"I called my friend Dr. Craig Spencer, a physician and Ebola survivor who worked in this region, to fill you in. Craig, take it away…

"What is Ebola? It’s a virus you don’t want to mess with. It was first discovered in 1976 near the Ebola river (hence the name). It’s severe (25-90% case fatality rate). Symptoms include fever, severe headache, vomiting, and in serious cases, internal and external bleeding.

"How did this start? We don’t know yet, but typically when a human comes in contact with an infected animal, usually fruit bats. From there, the virus spreads person-to-person. The people who take care of patients when they’re very sick—especially close family members and health care workers—are the most at risk. It spreads through direct contact with bodily fluids.

"Why is this concerning? Four reasons:

  1. This is not your normal Ebola. Ebola has six known strains. (The technical term is “species.”) Most outbreaks have been of the Zaire strain, and that’s the one we have vaccines and treatments for. But this outbreak is due to the Bundibugyo strain. This has caused a few small outbreaks in the past, but unlike the Zaire strain, there is no vaccine or treatment for this strain.

  2. This outbreak is already big. Health officials learned about this outbreak long after it had already been spreading. This makes it really hard to find contacts and all the cases. Most outbreaks don’t get this big by the time they’re over, let alone this big by the time we even recognize them.

  3. The location is exceptionally difficult. The outbreak is centered in eastern DR Congo, an area with significant conflict, cross-border traffic, and instability. There are also cases in the big cities here, which means a greater, faster spread due to the urban environment. I’ve worked up here; it’s a tough spot to get to and work in, due to transport and conflict. There was an Ebola outbreak here in 2018-2019 that grew to over 3,000 cases.

  4. It’s on a few borders. This outbreak is close to the borders of Uganda and South Sudan. Uganda has extensive experience with Ebola outbreaks; South Sudan has less. We already know of two cases across the border in Kampala, the largest city in Uganda. And it’s possible there have already been cross-border cases into South Sudan and Rwanda, given the size of the outbreak. WHO and countries will be stepping up surveillance, but again, this is a place with a lot of conflict and instability.

"This suggests the “true” outbreak is much larger, and that it will be tough to contain.

"What triggers the declaration of a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC)? WHO makes the PHEIC declaration based on three criteria:

  1. It is unusual and unexpected.

  2. There is the potential for cross-border spread.

  3. It requires a coordinated, international response.

"This is the ninth time it’s happened in history. But what is unique is that this is typically determined by committee. The director general declared PHEIC without convening the committee, hinting at the outbreak’s urgency. The outbreak was first announced on Friday, and a public health emergency was declared the next day.

"This designation helps with emergency funding and signals to the world the urgency of the outbreak.

"This has been spreading for awhile, without detection. Is this because of the cuts to USAID and global health efforts? They almost certainly played a role. U.S. funding once built strong surveillance systems around the world; without it, many of those programs are now shuttered. For example,

  • USAID helped train communities on safer burial practices during the last Ebola outbreak and set up airport screening to prevent symptomatic travelers from boarding planes.

  • CDC worked alongside affected countries and WHO to expand testing and coordinate the early response.

"But the biggest loss was trust. Outbreak detection depends as much on relationships as technology. When we pulled our funding and support, we didn’t just lose the programs. We lost the credibility and the contact that made early warning possible. That’s almost impossible to rebuild quickly once an outbreak has already begun.

"Does the travel ban work? Travel bans may seem like a necessary step, but they do not work unless you stop all travel from every country worldwide. Travel bans are often a political move; a tool to show the public that the government is responding. Travel bans can do a lot of damage in the meantime, like perpetuating disease-related stigma, reducing access to medical supplies, and more.

"What this means for you: If you had travel plans to this region, it’s time to cancel them. This is a high-risk situation in Central Africa and CDC released a Level 4 Travel Advisory (i.e., the highest warning level.)

"One American, a physician who was working in DRC on a mission, has tested positive. His family also had high-risk exposure. We have specialized treatment centers in the U.S. with experience taking care of Ebola patients, but the U.S. is sending them to Germany, arguing that its a shorter flight for the patient and their family.

"To the general public in the U.S., your risk remains very, very low right now.


Good news

  • Opioid deaths in the U.S. have declined for the third year in a row, driven by education and medical advancements. Harm reduction workers are noticing a less publicized reason: smoking is becoming more common than injecting. This shift may be saving lives because it allows people to better titrate their dose in real time, reducing the risk of a fatal overdose.

Source: CDC
  • Mifepristone was overruled by the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court blocked a Fifth Circuit ruling that would have required women to obtain Mifepristone through in-person visits, allowing telehealth and mail access to continue nationwide. This matters enormously for access: medication abortions now account for more than 60% of abortions in the U.S.


Bottom line

"Public health is never boring—it can be slightly terrifying (and really sad) at times. Let this all be a reminder of why we need these systems in place, from local to state, federal, and global.

"Love, YLE"


Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE) is founded by Dr. Katelyn Jetelina, MPH PhD—an epidemiologist, wife, and mom of two little girls. YLE comprises a team of experts, ranging from physicians to immunologists to epidemiologists to nutritionists, working together with one goal: to “Translate” ever-evolving public health science so that people are well-equipped to make evidence-based decisions. YLE reaches over 425,000 people across more than 132 countries. This newsletter is free to everyone, thanks to the generous support of fellow YLE community members.