Monday, June 01, 2026

New Democratic Talking Point: Uncomfortable Celebrating America's 250th

I  heard this on the news and then had to look it up to make sure I had heard it right. I've been hearing the same talking points lately.  I don't care how Ali Velshi or other hateful liberals feel. We are celebrating the signing of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, after America fought the British and won our independence, and we feel happy about that. The 250th anniversary doesn't come along every day.

Would these angry, spiteful people be talking this way if Obama or Biden or Bill Clinton was still the President? I doubt it. It's sheer pettiness mixed with a whopping case of Trump Derangement Syndrome.

This has nothing to do with race or slavery, even though some people are unable to deal with life without making everything about race and slavery.

If they don't want to celebrate America, fine!  Go visit North Korea.  But don't stop the rest of us from celebrating the country that we love. 

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MS NOW Anchor Feels ‘Deep Unease’ About Celebrating America’s 250th Birthday: US Has Never ‘Fully Reckoned With Its Racist Past’ 

"MS NOW anchor Ali Velshi told his viewers on Sunday he feels a “deep unease” about celebrating the USA’s 250th birthday — in large part due to the country’s “unresolved racial politics.” He also slammed America as a “so-called democracy” during a rant on his program.

“Anniversaries are imperfect records of the thing which is being celebrated. In America’s case, anniversaries often gloss over the racial dynamics underlying much of America’s history and politics, issues that remain unsolved, because America has never actually fully reckoned with its racist past and its original founding sin of slavery,” Velshi said.

"He continued, “In one month, America will mark the 250th anniversary of its founding. Like previous anniversaries, there is a deep unease about this. I feel a deep unease about the celebrations to which I am invited to mark the 250th anniversary of our so-called democracy.”

Dr Ruth Report, 5-31-26

Here is the latest informative medical newsletter from Dr Ruth Ann Crystal:

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Dr. Ruth Report, 5/31/26
Ruth Ann Crystal MD, Jun 01, 2026 

Weekly Virus Summary

COVID, RSV, Flu A and Flu B in wastewater are all low or very low across the United States.

Acute COVID infections

5/27/26 Nature: Autoantibodies to IL-1Ra and PGRN in severe COVID-19 are associated with inflammation-induced hyperphosphorylated antigen isoforms https://buff.ly/AuIMMGT

  • Germany’s NAPKON network analyzed blood from 280 COVID patients and found that severe COVID disease was associated with autoantibodies that neutralized two key regulators of inflammation, IL-1Ra and PGRN, effectively removing the natural brakes on the immune response. Although these autoantibodies declined over 12 months, affected cells retained abnormal sensitivity to inflammatory signals, suggesting lasting biological consequences beyond antibody clearance.

5/27/26 Nature Biotechnology: Scoring gene importance by interpreting single-cell foundation models - https://buff.ly/xYz6GJY

  • Genentech researchers developed an AI tool called SIGnature that analyzed 22 million cells across 412 studies to identify gene activity patterns. The tool uncovered a shared immune cell program operating across Kawasaki disease, sepsis, and severe COVID infection. Serum from Kawasaki disease patients was also able to activate that same program in laboratory cells.

5/25/26 BMC Pulmonary Medicine: CT-adipose measures identify severe SARS-CoV-2 risk beyond traditional obesity metrics: a C4R cohort study https://buff.ly/StJJOX8

  • A study of 8,412 American adults who had CT scans taken before the pandemic found that excess fat deposited around the heart and abdominal organs predicted higher odds of COVID hospitalization or death independently of BMI. These imaging based fat measurements captured risks that standard body weight classifications alone failed to detect.

5/23/26 Cell Discovery: Exosomal ORF3a mediates lung-liver axis to dysregulate hepatic lipid metabolism in mild COVID-19 https://buff.ly/6QU32Fz

  • Researchers found that 53% of 196 patients with mild COVID infection had abnormal liver function tests. Follow-up mouse and laboratory studies identified the viral protein ORF3a as a likely cause, showing it can travel from the lungs to the liver inside exosomes, where it triggers fat accumulation and inflammation. These findings suggest that ORF3a can damage the liver even when the virus remains confined to the respiratory tract, making it a potential target for therapies aimed at preventing COVID-related liver injury.

Pediatrics

5/18/26 Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: Circulating Extracellular Vesicles Drive Innate Immune Dysregulation in MIS-C https://buff.ly/Xmkz207

  • Scientists from Turkey examined 98 pediatric patients and determined that small particles (extracellular vesicles) circulating in the blood, carrying remnants of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, triggered abnormal innate immune responses in children diagnosed with multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C). These extracellular vesicles activated specific inflammatory signaling pathways that researchers connected to potential vascular damage in affected children.

5/25/26 Brain, Behavior, and Immunity: Exposure to SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein during development induces astrogliosis, synapse loss and long-term cognitive dysfunction in mice https://buff.ly/94nQtYC

  • “We found that a single neonatal injection of the Spike protein in mice [on day 1 after birth] increases seizure susceptibility, induces astrogliosis, and triggers a significant loss of excitatory and inhibitory synapses in the cortex and hippocampus within 10 days. Remarkably, 60 days post-Spike protein exposure, male mice exhibited persistent, sex-specific cognitive impairments” and memory deficits. The affected males also showed persistent neuroinflammation in the brain, suggesting that timing of viral protein exposure during development may have sex specific consequences for cognitive health.

From: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0889159126005477

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Long COVID

5/27/26 JAMA: Long COVID Persistence and Surveillance Gaps Across 58 US Hospitals https://buff.ly/zGt4uMR

  • A cohort study of 457,950 hospitalized COVID patients across 58 US hospitals using AI found that 1 in 6 patients (16.3%) had Long COVID, with 89% of those cases progressing to chronic conditions. Standard diagnostic billing codes missed more than half of actual Long COVID cases, “obscuring a substantial chronic disease burden”. Long COVID prevalence continued to rise through 2024, showing an increasing and accumulating burden on the health care system.

5/28/26 Cell: Autoantibodies in long COVID: A mechanistic foothold in a heterogeneous disease https://buff.ly/GCwqjae

  • English researchers Wall and Richter reviewed data from two independent groups- one from the Netherlands and the other from the United States- showing that giving purified IgG antibodies from people with Long COVID to mice causes similar Long COVID-like symptoms in the mice. They reviewed a paper from Chen et al. from the Netherlands that showed that transferring IgG antibodies from people with Long COVID (pwLC) and high GFAP levels caused pain-associated behaviors in recipient mice.

  • They summarized: “Together, these studies provide compelling evidence that autoantibodies directly contribute to symptom generation in a subset of pwLC [people with Long COVID], particularly those with neurological symptoms, including pain and temperature sensitivity.”

4/21/26 Chen et al., Cell (Netherlands): Transfer of IgG from long COVID patients induces symptomology in mice https://buff.ly/Xqt2nUp

5//28/26 Cell (Iwasaki Lab): A causal link between autoantibodies and neurological symptoms in long COVID https://buff.ly/1nPeqLu

Graphical Abstract

From: https://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(26)00509-X

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5/27/26 Nature: Long-term cognitive outcomes after mild COVID-19, critical COVID-19, and non-COVID critical illness: a prospective cohort comparison https://buff.ly/MxGCS53

  • Researchers from Germany evaluated 51 patients at a minimum of 12 weeks following illness and found that cognitive test performance was comparable between those who had mild COVID and those who had required intensive care. However, participants who developed Long COVID following a mild infection reported significantly greater burdens of fatigue, anxiety, and depression than their ICU counterparts despite that cognitive equivalence.

Made with ChatGPT and Canva

5/25/26 BMC Cardiovascular Disorders: Association of long-COVID with major adverse cardiovascular events and mortality: a real-world data cohort study https://buff.ly/ioBDTVL

  • A matched cohort study of 86,122 patient pairs found that individuals with Long COVID have a 4.48 times greater risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), a 6.48x greater risk of coronary artery disease, and 3.46x greater risk of stroke. In addition, people with Long COVID also showed a 1.53x higher rate of death from any cause.

Made with Canva and ChatGPT

5/25/26 Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology: Post-COVID-19 Onset of Allergic Conditions in a Propensity-Matched Cohort of Children and Adults https://buff.ly/reKTAFe

  • In a propensity matched cohort of nearly 800,000 US military TRICARE beneficiaries ages 1 to 64, COVID infection was significantly associated with new onset allergic conditions across all six categories studied, with asthma showing the greatest risk increase (54% higher in the full cohort, 82% higher in children) in the 18 months after COVID infection. The findings suggest COVID drives persistent immune dysregulation toward type 2 inflammation.

5/13/26 Brain Communications (NIH): Central noradrenergic deficiency in post-infectious chronic fatigue: neurobehavioral correlates https://buff.ly/CLk76Gh

  • Researchers at the NIH Clinical Center studied 122 individuals and found that both ME/CFS and Long COVID patients exhibit reduced activity in the brain’s norepinephrine signaling pathway. This neurochemical deficit was associated with greater fatigue severity, diminished grip endurance, post exertional malaise, and overall poorer health outcomes across the group.

5/17/26 Vascular Pharmacology: The role of the endothelium in long COVID https://buff.ly/hfs6bRS

  • University of Miami investigators found that SARS-CoV-2 infection can impair the endothelial cells lining of blood vessels, compromising circulation and tissue oxygenation in Long COVID patients. Two small clinical trials observed that supplementation with vitamin C and L-arginine restored measurable improvements in vascular function, though researchers caution that large scale trials are needed before any conclusions can be drawn.

6/2026 (online 5/25/26) iScience: SARS-CoV-2 infects olfactory neurons and basal stem cells and induces axonal degeneration through TRPV1 activation https://buff.ly/s33iwpZ

  • Scientists from the University of Hong Kong and Western University demonstrated in both human sensory cells and hamster models that SARS-CoV-2 directly infects the neurons responsible for smell as well as the basal stem cells that normally regenerate them, and also trigger axonal degeneration via the TRPV1 pathway. When TRPV1 was pharmacologically blocked with Capsazepine, this cellular damage was significantly reduced, pointing toward a concrete therapeutic target for the persistent smell loss seen in some Long COVID patients.

From: https://www.cell.com/iscience/fulltext/S2589-0042(26)01473-2

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Measles

CDC Measles Update

  • As of May 28, 2026, 1,983 confirmed measles cases were reported in the United States in 2026.

John Hopkins US Measles Tracker

Vaccine Preventable Disease Tracker

10/29/25 Vaccine-Preventable Disease: A Global Tracker from Think Global Health https://buff.ly/6qBMq0w

Ebola in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)

5/29/26 NBC: Tracking the 2026 Ebola outbreak https://buff.ly/aQo5ggu

Other news

5/31/26 NEJM: Daraxonrasib or Chemotherapy in Previously Treated Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer https://buff.ly/kw22hZ2

  • In a randomized trial of 500 patients with previously treated metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (91.8% with RAS G12 mutations), the oral RAS(ON) multiselective inhibitor Daraxonrasib nearly doubled median overall survival compared to chemotherapy (13.2 vs. 6.7 months). Daraxonrasib also improved progression-free survival, marking a significant advance for a cancer with historically poor outcomes.

5/21/26 Nature Medicine: Resetting autoimmune disease with CAR cell therapies https://buff.ly/U6TAVT1

  • Researchers from Germany and China reviewed the use of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) cell therapies, originally developed to treat certain cancers, as a way to selectively eliminate B cells and “reset” the immune system in autoimmune diseases. They found that CAR therapies can achieve profound depletion of disease causing B cells throughout the body, potentially leading to long lasting remission from autoimmune diseases without the need for ongoing medication.

Fig. 1: Contribution of B cells in AutoImmune Diseases (AID)

From: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-026-04430-6/figures/1

5/27/26 Nature: Human haematopoietic stem cells remember inflammatory stress https://buff.ly/7DjnDT4

  • A Canadian group shows that blood forming stem cells called Haematopoietic Stem Cells with inflammatory Memory (HSC-iM) retain a molecular memory of past inflammation. This phenomenon was confirmed in mouse xenograft models and in single cell genomic analysis of human samples. Inflammatory imprinting in HSC-iMs was observed in patients who experienced severe COVID infection, in aged individuals, and in those living with sickle cell disease.

5/30/26 CNN: After more than 66 years in the air, the industry’s longest-serving flight attendant prepares to retire https://buff.ly/D7LggrP

  • Joan Prince Crandall, a Delta Air Lines flight attendant based in Seattle, retired May 30 after a record 66-year career. Crandall began working in 1959 at Pacific Airlines on a 24-passenger Douglas DC-3 plane. “There have been rapid advances in aviation during her career; the moon landing and the Boeing 747 came a decade after she started working as a stewardess.”

Joan Prince Crandall, center, with other Delta Air Lines flight attendants, pilots and crew members. (Delta Air Lines)

Have a great week,

Ruth Ann Crystal MD

Sunday, May 31, 2026

The Deadly Consequences of Wokeness & Political Correctness

From Brenda O'Neill at Spiked Online, a powerful article about the horrific murder of Henry Nowak and the atrocious, politically-correct response. The police believed the lying murderer, not the victim. This could very well have happened here in the PC United States.

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Henry Nowak and the savagery of state wokeness.  The police’s vile treatment of young Henry exposes the cruelty and injustice of state ‘anti-racism’. 

5-29-26

"So this is where wokeness has dragged us. Into a moral abyss where a boy is handcuffed by cops as he bleeds to death. Into a wasteland of virtue where an 18-year-old lad, stabbed five times, is treated as a speechcriminal as he gasps his final breaths. Into a sorry, dystopic excuse for a society where the last words a youngster hears are the defamatory cries of the man who killed him. ‘He was racist’, his murderer said. ‘I can’t breathe’, the boy begged

"The case of Henry Nowak has shocked the nation. He was a Polish-Briton in his first year at university. During a night out in Southampton in England in December last year, he had a fatal encounter with a Sikh man named Vickrum Digwa. Some kind of altercation took place. Digwa then stabbed Nowak five times with his kirpan, the ceremonial curved sword that Sikhs carry. Nowak was gored in his chest, his face and his legs. He scrambled over a fence, leaving a blood trail in his wake. ‘I’m dying’, local residents heard him say. He was right.

"As savage as the knifing was, it was what happened next that has shaken Britain’s soul. Digwa’s mother arrived and spirited away the murder weapon – it was later found hidden in the family home with 20 other Sikh swords and knives. Digwa then accused Nowak of having racially abused him. He said Nowak used a racist slur against him, punched him and knocked off his turban. These were ‘wicked lies’, the court heard during his murder trial. Yet there was a group of people on the scene of this atrocity who believed Digwa’s vile libels against the youth he had just fatally lacerated: the police.

"The police’s behaviour that night defies all logic and humanity. They bowed to Digwa’s defamatory slurs and arrested and handcuffed young Henry. The Telegraph’s report captures the barbarism of the police’s credulous ineptitude that grim evening: ‘As the teenager lay there, unable to breathe as his lungs filled with blood, begging officers for help, they ignored his pleas and placed him under arrest. He died less than an hour later.’ If anything will cause decent Britons to lose faith in the police, it’s this: the haunting vision of a boy being manhandled by the state as he drowned in his own blood.

"This week Digwa was found guilty of murder. His mother was found guilty of assisting an offender. And the police have apologised for the fact that Nowak was ‘arrested in the moments before he lost consciousness’. But this isn’t the end of this story. It can’t be. This cruellest of deaths, this humiliation by the state of a boy who was dying, will surely force a reckoning with the social poison of political correctness. For it exposes the extent to which the cult of wokeness has chased truth and virtue from our societies.

"We all know why Digwa’s evil lie was believed and why wounded, gasping Henry’s pleas for help went unheeded – it’s because the word ‘racism’ acts like a magic spell on our ruling class. It’s like a rhetorical narcotic. The minute they hear it, they morph, like woke Manchurian candidates, into wide-eyed searchers for the merest hint of that greatest sin in our morally deracinated times: white privilege, and prejudicial speech. Their aim becomes not the discovery of truth but the demonstration of virtue. On that street in Southampton, once the word ‘racism’ had been uttered, the role of the state’s representatives suddenly and radically changed: it was no longer to investigate a potential crime but to obsequiously act out a moral script.

"Having prostrated themselves so fully before the new regime religion that falsely calls itself ‘anti-racism’, the police were virtually programmed to believe the ‘brown man’ and be sceptical of the ‘white man’. No doubt the critical race theory that pumps like a toxin in the veins of the establishment kicked in, meaning that the Sikh who had so ruthlessly wielded his sword instantly became the victim, while the target of his red-mist knifing – the white boy – became the oppressor. The state’s intoxication with the hyper-racialised politics of victimhood has driven it ever further into a quagmire of dogma where cool moral judgment is all but impossible.

"It’s important to say that this handcuffing of a dying boy was not ‘a failing’ by individual police officers. The police forces of the United Kingdom are expressly instructed to believe, without question, every accusation of hate crime. They are told that even things perceived to be racist are probably racist. They are trained to see ‘racism’ everywhere – in every slight, in every tussle between whites and non-whites. The police’s cruel subduing of a stabbed teen was not an aberration – it was the horrific logical conclusion of the new ruling-class ideology that sees us less as citizens with rights than as racial creatures in need of micro-management. The demeaning of young Henry was the woke state in action.

"The state turned a blind eye to the rape of vulnerable girls by mostly Muslim gangs out of a fear of being thought ‘Islamophobic’. The very same wilful blindness born of cowardice led those officers to see a stabbed boy as a tyrant and his stabber as a victim. The questions pile up. For how much longer can we suffer under such a two-tier ideology that allows Sikhs to do what the rest of us are forbidden from doing: carry lethal weapons? Why did Keir Starmer take the knee for George Floyd when he died 4,000 miles away but not for young Henry murdered and failed down in Southampton? And most pressingly, what are we going to do about a state that arrests a boy as he chokes on his own blood and as his killer gloats and maligns him? We have to do something." 

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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 latest book – After the Pogrom: 7 October, Israel and the Crisis of Civilisation – is available to order on Amazon UK and Amazon US now. And find Brendan on Instagram: @burntoakboy.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Leave Jaxson Dart Alone!

Michael Savage always said that "liberalism is a mental disorder".  So is Trump Derangement Syndrome, and we've seen both disorders on full display in the treatment of Giants QB Jaxson Dart, whose only crime was introducing Trump at his rally in New York. Evidently, you are always expected to hate and boycott Donald Trump, and if you don't do so, it becomes a huge controversy.

The criticism and hatred towards Dart has been insane, as are the people overreacting to a normal occurrence. It used to be considered an honor to introduce the President of the United States -- unless, apparently, that president is Donald Trump. The Giants even had a struggle session in their locker room, but Jaxson Dart did not grovel or apologize.

Many years ago, before Bill Clinton was sworn in as President, my Republican parents were sightseeing in Washington, and they came across Clinton with Secret Service agents.  They were so thrilled to shake his hand and congratulate him, and they posed for pictures for my father's camera. It turned out later that my father had forgotten the film! But they had a normal reaction to seeing a president-to-be, no matter what the party. This is the kind of decency and manners that are totally lacking in today's society, where a quarterback introducing a president is now attacked and demeaned rather than admired and congratulated.

Just leave him alone, and find something else to occupy your time that doesn't involve hatred. 

"Long COVID Is Being Forgotten"

This is a very well-written article,  written by someone who is a Long COVID patient herself.

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As Hantavirus and Ebola Cases Rise, Long COVID Is Being Forgotten

Alison Stine, Nonprofit Quarterly, May 29, 2026

"It was when a self-described science podcaster used the phrase “post-COVID” in a social media graphic that I had to speak up. I don’t normally comment on businesses’ or strangers’ posts, but the use of such a biased, unscientific phrase motivated me to post a comment in protest.

“Post-COVID” is a woefully inaccurate term. While, in the current moment, we are no longer at the peak of COVID—often defined as extreme waves of deaths and hospitalizations—we do not and will never live in a “post-COVID” world. People are still being impacted by this disease, including becoming permanently disabled and contracting new cases.

"The World Health Organization (WHO) reported 12,284 new cases of SARS-CoV-2 from April 6 to May 3, 2026. In the previous 28-day period, 27,615 new cases were reported. According to WHO, five countries in the Americas, Europe, and Southeast Asia all had increases in new cases greater than 10 percent.

"In addition to COVID, we live in a world facing increasing rates of multiple infectious diseases mutating, in large part due to climate change and habitat loss, and diseases stretching into new areas where they had previously been unreported.

"The latest examples of this are the Andes strain of hantavirus, with a cluster of cases coming from a Dutch-flagged cruise ship in May, and Ebola, with new cases confirmed in the Democratic Republic of Congo, in a rapidly escalating outbreak.

"News of both viruses raced through social media, with many posts fear-mongering or spreading inaccurate information. Repeatedly, I read the phrase “I can’t do another pandemic,” implying the poster could not bear to get vaccines, stay inside, socially distance, or wear a mask.

"For those of us living with Long COVID, such comments are beyond frustrating. The reason we have post-COVID syndrome is because not enough people cared to do a pandemic and follow medical guidance the first time around, including getting vaccinated and boosted and wearing masks—community care our community should still be doing.

"Even as other viruses that pose less of a threat to the public in the United States have spikes in cases, COVID is still with us and continues to be a mass-disabling event. Ignoring or minimizing COVID contributes to delays in diagnosis or care and causes the mental health of people living with Long COVID to suffer. It also does not prepare us for facing newly emerging or more widely spreading diseases.

“I Am Still Not the Same As I Was” 

"I’m one of the about 18 million people worldwide diagnosed with Long COVID. It is estimated that the real number of people with Long COVID is actually much higher, but many people have not been officially diagnosed, either due to not understanding or refusing to believe their symptoms, or because they don’t have access to care.

"I was diagnosed with Long COVID following one COVID infection in February 2023.

"That’s similar to the experience of Luke (who is using a pseudonym to protect his identity) in Minnesota. Luke was a college student at his “dream school” when he contracted COVID as a sophomore. Eventually, the illness, which included sudden joint pain so severe he couldn’t stand up for longer than a minute, forced him to drop out of school and move home.

“The first doctor I spoke with diagnosed me with post-viral arthritis as a result of my COVID-19 infection, and I struggled to believe that the mild virus that cleared up weeks ago could be doing this to me,” Luke said in an interview with NPQ.

"Other Long COVID symptoms he experienced included extreme fatigue, so much he was sleeping 12 hours a day without a dent in his exhaustion, and brain fog that impacted his ability to speak coherently.

"My own symptoms have also been fatigue and cognitive issues, including a daily headache that lasted three years before I was given an additional diagnosis of neural inflammation and put on a treatment plan. Luke and I are fortunate in that we both happen to live near two of the last remaining medical clinics devoted to the research and treatment of Long COVID. But these clinics are disappearing every day, due to funding cuts.

"As Luke said, “I am still not the same as I was before Long COVID, and I may never be. I am hopeful that more treatment options will emerge down the line with further research, but as of right now, Long COVID has sidetracked my life, and been permanently disabling to me and many others.”

“Most People Stopped Caring”

"For those still very much living in the reality of COVID and the long-term aftermath of even one infection, news of spiking cases of hantavirus and Ebola have been received with resignation. It is not easy to trust that people will do the right thing when it comes to community care.

"Writer Stephanie King said in an interview with NPQ: “I have zero confidence that people will take appropriate precautions against hantavirus because COVID has shown that we don’t really believe in public health anymore.

"King hasn’t been diagnosed with Long COVID, but she does have recurring shingles infections after getting COVID while she was running a GED program in North Philadelphia, PA. Even a single COVID infection has been linked to new health problems developing after recovery. These can include, according to Harvard Health, “heart attacks, high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, inflammation…and blood clots that traveled to [patients’] lungs.”

"As Luke told NPQ, “First and foremost, I’m horrified that public health has been so thoroughly politicized in America that it’s affecting the safety of the rest of the world. The cuts to USAID have already cost lives, and I fear that many Americans won’t realize what’s been lost until the consequences reach their doorstep.

Friday, May 29, 2026

Ebola Bundibugyo Strain: We Don't Want It Here

They say that Ebola risk in America is low, but can you imagine the public relations nightmare here if any of these patients were to enter our country?

This is Richard Preston's "The Hot Zone" come to life. 

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ABC News, 5-28-26

'Out of control': Doctors on the front line of Ebola outbreak speak out. Health officials believe the Ebola strain was undetected for up to three months. 

Doctors and public health workers at the epicenter of the Ebola outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) told ABC News that the deadly virus is still spreading at an alarming rate.

“The outbreak is completely out of control,” said Dr. Richard Kojan in an interview from the city of Bunia in Ituri province, which is the hardest hit.

Kojan, who has been involved in fighting previous Ebola outbreaks in central and western Africa and is president of the Alliance for International Medical Action, said deep mistrust within some local communities is hampering efforts to contain the virus.

Another clinician, Dr. Richard Lokudi, who is the director of the main hospital in Mongbwalu, the hardest hit area, told ABC News that the disease was spreading “at an exponential speed.”

Lokudi said seven symptomatic patients suspected of having Ebola had recently “escaped” from Mongbwalu Hospital.

This was creating “chains and chains of contamination,” Lokudi said, adding that this was making the virus “difficult to fight.”

According to the World Health Organization, more than 1,000 suspected cases of a rare strain of Ebola, known as Bundibugyo, have been identified in the eastern DRC and more than 230 suspected deaths from the virus have been recorded.

There is currently no vaccine for the Bundibugyo strain. Seven confirmed cases have also been identified in neighboring Uganda, the WHO said.

Last week, the WHO declared the outbreak a public health emergency of international concern.

Jeremy Konyndyk, who worked as a senior official at USAID under Presidents Barack Obama and Joe Biden and is now president of Refugees International, said the outbreak had already reached an “explosive” level of transmission.

Konyndyk, who is based in Maryland, described the situation in central Africa as “about as urgent as any Ebola response has ever been” and said the 1,000 suspected cases were “almost certainly the tip of the iceberg” and “perhaps even an undercount by a factor of two or three.”

Health officials believe the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola had been circulating, undetected, in the Ituri province for up to three months before it was officially identified. The unusual strain was harder to identify via testing.

However, levels of mistrust within local communities toward measures to contain the virus, as well as skepticism that the virus even exists, are now hampering efforts to stem the outbreak, health officials say.

Kojan said there is currently a lack of laboratory testing capacity in the region, which is needed for accurate diagnosis and effective contact tracing.

The lack of lab capacity means symptomatic patients suspected of having the virus can wait for days for test results, increasing the risk of them leaving isolation prematurely, Kojan said.

“People don't trust that, you know, Ebola is a reality,” he said.

The Congolese clinician said he was on “the front line” without access to a laboratory, meaning he was struggling to build trust with patients.

New cases every day

Both Lokudi and Kojan said their healthcare facilities were receiving new suspected cases of Ebola every day.

Amidst the high levels of mistrust, there has also been growing anger toward strict healthcare procedures, which are necessary to safely bury the dead and stop the virus from spreading.

The two Congolese doctors confirmed reports that isolation tents and healthcare facilities had been set on fire by angry crowds in recent days.

In an exchange of messages with ABC News on Tuesday, Lokudi said the police and military were now protecting his hospital, but he said angry groups of youths had still been gathering nearby.

He said that in some cases, officials were unable to safely access remote areas of Ituri province to investigate suspected deaths from the virus.

Lokudi described the situation as “really concerning,” saying that if teams do not go to such areas, then family members face a high risk of catching the virus if they themselves bury their loved ones.

Ebola is transmitted via bodily fluids, so treating sick patients and handling the deceased should only be done by healthcare teams in protective suits. Ideally, a victim’s home should also be sprayed down with disinfectant.

In the remote rural communities affected, these vital protective measures can run contrary to local burial practices, which has been a source of many people’s anger.

Kojan described a lack of masks and protective clothing as another “really big problem.” Both he and Lokudi said more adequately trained healthcare professionals were needed on the ground to raise awareness and implement barriers to stop the spread of the virus.

Cuts to U.S. programs created difficulties

Konyndyk said significant cuts to U.S. humanitarian aid in the DRC had made things harder.

“We're kind of fighting this one with several hands tied behind our back,” Konyndyk told ABC News.

“When we have fought Ebola in the past on this scale, it has been a combination of the Ministry of Health, WHO, USAID, CDC," he said. 

"USAID is fully gone, CDC is badly weakened. WHO has been badly weakened, the U.S., of course, withdrew from WHO and cut off all funding,” Konyndyk added.

The former USAID official said in an interview that they were “almost certain” that if USAID were still in place, this outbreak would have been caught earlier.

Konyndyk said he believed earlier reports of “an unknown viral hemorrhagic fever outbreak” in the region “would have been brought to the attention of the U.S. mission” in the DRC.

“I've talked with some of the members who worked on that team, who were forced out of the government, who would say things like, look, I would be on the phone every week with health leaders in this part of the country,” Konyndyk told ABC News.

“I think the U.S. visibility on that diminished badly and that contributed certainly to the US being slow to wake up to this, but also to the world being slow to wake up to it,” the humanitarian leader said.

A White House official said the claim that cuts to U.S. aid have affected the response to the Ebola outbreak in the DRC was “ridiculous.”

“You could just as easily say people died because England didn’t give enough money or Canada didn’t give more or China didn’t. Why not blame the other countries who don’t do any foreign aid?” the official added.

The Trump administration has argued that its “America First Foreign Assistance programs” are intertwined with broader foreign policy goals and the national interest.

“The United States has saved more lives, and continues to save more lives, than any other country in the world, and we’re going to continue to do it,” the White House official said in a statement. "We’re not going to continue to pour billions of dollars out the door of American taxpayer funds for programs that don’t work and in some cases were flat-out corrupt."

Back in the affected area of the DRC, both doctors interviewed by ABC said they had messages for the U.S. and the world.

International support is needed urgently “on all levels,” according to Lokudi.

Kojan said he is appealing to the world that this is about people’s “humanity.”

“People are really scared. It’s our humanity … so my message is, you know, we need attention,” he said.

Criticizing Our Ebola Quarantine Unit In Kenya? You're Very Welcome.

You'd think public health officials would be more grateful for American help and any help offered during the Ebola outbreak in the Congo. We would just rather not have Ebola in our country.

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Chris Dall, MA May 28, 2026

"As the number of cases in the Ebola outbreak centered in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) continues to rise, neighboring Uganda has closed its border.

"The Ugandan Ministry of Health said on X that the border closure is temporary and that crossings will be authorized for outbreak response, humanitarian operations, food and cargo transportation, and security reasons. 

“All authorized entrants shall be subjected to strict health screening, completion of locator forms, documentation, and continuous monitoring at all ports of entry in accordance with Ministry of Health surveillance protocols,” the post said.

"Anyone entering from DRC under other circumstances will be taken into mandatory isolation for 21 days.

"Uganda currently has eight confirmed cases of Ebola and one death in the outbreak, which is caused by the rarer Bundibugyo species, a variant that has no approved treatment or vaccine. According to data presented today by the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC)DRC has 1,077 suspected cases (129 confirmed) and 246 suspected deaths (18 confirmed). Global charity Save the Children reports that 25% of the 17 confirmed deaths have been in children.

"The outbreak began in DRC’s Ituri province, which is in the northeastern part of the country, bordering Uganda and South Sudan. Over 90% of cases have been reported in the province, which has been plagued by conflict between government forces and militia groups, resulting in displacement of millions of refugees. Although the outbreak was first reported by the World Health Organization (WHO) on May 15, officials believe it began weeks earlier. 

"It’s the 17th Ebola outbreak in DRC since the virus was first identified in 1976.

"WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, PhD, said today in a message to people in Ituri that the agency is working closely with the DRC government to stop the outbreak and that he will be coming to Bunia, the capital of the province, in the next few days. He also urged warring parties in the region to declare a ceasefire.

“No cause, no conflict, no grievance is worth condemning innocent people to death from a preventable disease,” Tedros said. “A ceasefire, even a temporary one, would save lives. I urge you, I implore you: give us the space to help the people who need it most.” 

Aid supplies arrive

"Meanwhile, the Associated Press reports that aid supplies donated by the European Union were delivered today to Bunia, where health workers have been struggling to contain the spread of the virus with a limited supply of gloves, masks, boots, and medication. An official with UNICEF, which is helping deliver the supplies, said the aid is expected to arrive in batches over the next eight days.

"The Guardian reports that several doctors and nurses treating Ebola patients at healthcare facilities in DRC have died after contracting the virus. Healthcare workers and family members often face the greatest risk of infection with the virus, which spreads through contact with bodily fluids, because of their proximity to infected patients. 

"The US State Department said today that it will allocate $80 million to partners on the ground—including UNICEF, the World Food Program, World Vision, and the International Organization for Migration—to scale up procurement and delivery of personal protective equipment and diagnostics, border screening and surveillance, and contract tracing. 

"The State Department also said it has committed $50 million to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs to fund up to 50 Ebola response clinics in the affected areas.

"But in a press conference today, Africa CDC Director-General Jean Kaseya, MD, MPH, said he’s concerned about international funding for the response after initial pledges of $500 million dropped to $290 million in a few days.

“We cannot afford to stop this outbreak without resources,” he said. Kaseya also called out travel restrictions imposed by some western countries. “It’s not acceptable.”

US quarantine unit in Kenya under fire

"US officials also confirmed today that Kenyan officials have agreed to a US plan to establish a quarantine unit in Kenya for Americans exposed to Ebola in the current outbreak, according to the Wall Street Journal. More than 30 US public health officers are on their way to Kenya to staff the 50-bed unit.

"The plan is being widely criticized by public health experts, who’ve argued that the United States already has specialized treatment centers specifically designed for Ebola and other deadly infectious diseases and that quickly setting up a high-quality clinic in Kenya will be impossible.

“Building and staffing a new unit in Kenya during an active outbreak for Americans exposed to Ebola is deeply concerning,” Infectious Diseases Society of America President Ronald Nahass, MD, said in a statement. “It raises serious questions about resources, timing and the level of care Americans sent there will receive.” 

Thursday, May 28, 2026

The Nova Music Festival Exhibition

I love the powerful writing at Spiked and appreciate the sympathy and understanding they show for the Jews and for Israel. I would like to see this exhibit here in the United States, but I wouldn't be at all surprised if it were immediately vandalized by hateful antisemites. 

You would've expected to see an outpouring of sympathy after the October 7 pogroms. Instead you saw an explosion of violent Jew-hatred such that I never saw and that I still can't understand.

Just as millions still don't believe that the Holocaust happened, they have preferred to twist, deny, or explain away October 7. But in both cases, photographs and personal items do not lie. 

---------------------------- 

By Hugo Timms at Spiked Online, 5-27-26

The unforgivable betrayal of the Nova Festival victims. When revellers at the Nova festival were brutalised by Hamas, Western cultural elites said they deserved it. 

"‘How much evil?’

"That was the question asked by Ayala Avraham, reflecting on her experience at the Nova Music Festival on 7 October 2023. No three words do a better job of summarising the terror, disgust and heartbreak one can’t help but share as you walk through the new London exhibition that bears witness to the events of that morning. 

"Avraham was an unlikely survivor of the terror unleashed by Hamas at the gathering of music-lovers, near Kibbutz Re’im in southern Israel. She was abducted along with her husband, Ilan Avraham, whose birthday they were celebrating. Ayala fled, but Ilan could not. His captors demanded he call out to her, hoping that in doing so she would be lured back to them. His refusal saved her life and ended his. Ilan was shot in the head, before an entire magazine was expended into his lifeless body. He was then ‘unrecognisable’, according to his wife.

"The events that Ayala’s short monologue conveys a small part of began at 6.29am, as the sunrise was breaking out across the desert landscape. The music abruptly stopped when an organiser of the festival appeared on the main stage, issuing a ‘red alert’ to the crowd of 3,500. A short distance away, 3,000 terrorists were flooding across the border that separates Gaza and Israel. About one in 10 – 378 people – listening to the announcement would not survive. In the following hours Hamas expanded its attack across neighbouring kibbutzim, killing a total of 1,200 civilians, 310 Israeli soldiers and 58 police. No greater loss of Jewish life had occurred in a day since the Holocaust.

"The Nova Exhibition lets the horror speak for itself. You can look at and touch the tents, the shoes, the water bottles and the iPhones. They carry a simple and poignant message – does any of this look and feel familiar to you? Does it remind you of the sweat, the dust, the hangover? To everyone there, the answer is probably yes, it does – we’ve all been there. Until you remember that the sneakers in your hands quite possibly belonged to someone who was raped, then shot, then dragged into Gaza and paraded before an ecstatic crowd of young men. Perhaps his or her lifeless body was returned, months after a traumatised family had to witness it being used as a bartering chip by the terrorists. Or perhaps it wasn’t returned at all.

"Fast forward to June 2025. It’s the annual Glastonbury Festival, in a sunny field in Somerset. Here, tens of thousands of predominantly young people have gathered to do the very same thing that, less than two years earlier, the revellers at Nova had done. To listen to music, to dance with their friends until sunrise – to be swept up in the intoxicating feeling of common humanity that draws people to music festivals from across the world.

"You might expect such people to feel an affinity for the victims of Nova. But instead, there was the opposite. Glastonbury 2025 was effectively a Palestine Action rally, a celebration of the ‘resistance’ that began when the first shots were fired by Hamas at the defenceless attendees of the Nova festival. Irish rap trio Kneecap – one of whose members had publicly praised Hamas – performed in front of a sea of Palestinian flags and led the crowd in a chant of ‘Free Palestine’. Bob Vylan frontman Pascal Robinson-Foster took things further, leading the crowd in chants ‘Death to the IDF (Israel Defence Forces)’. ‘Widespread support for Palestine was evident in every bar, audience and campsite’, wrote one journalist in glowing approval.

"Despite having everything in common with those at the Nova festival, there was a collective refusal on behalf of everyone at Glastonbury to acknowledge it. The same thing could be said for Coachella in the US, or just about any music festival in the West. 

"Why? Because most of those at the Nova festival were Israelis, and very likely Jewish. And if there is one unquestionable progressive doctrine of our times, it is that Israelis can never – under any circumstances – be seen as ‘people like us’, let alone as victims.

"The ‘radicals’ who spent Glastonbury denigrating Israel and praising its enemies would do well to spare an hour at the Nova exhibition in Shoreditch, east London – no doubt it is a short distance from where many of them work or live. But I wouldn’t hold my breath. Because Ayala Avraham’s question – ‘How much evil?’ – might not be the only one troubling their conscience. It will be replaced by something possibly worse: ‘How could we have betrayed you?’"

The Nova Exhibition in London is now open to the public. Book tickets and find out more here.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Your Local Epidemiologist:The Dose, 5-27-26

Here's Your Local Epidemiologist with another roundup of important medical news.

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Ebola, chemical plants and health, hantavirus, common colds, heat and more
Katelyn Jetelina, The Dose: May 27

As they say, bugs have ears. Public health has had a relentless May. Chemical plant (near) explosions, Ebola, hantavirus, and that's before you even get to the usual suspects: common colds, heat, and ticks.

Here’s an attempt to keep you up to speed and, more importantly, what it means for you and your community.


But first, an announcement: World Cup

The World Cup starts in 15 days (not like anyone is counting down), and we are hanging TVs in the Health Security Operations Center. It’s going to be a gorgeous, chaotic celebration of basically every culture on earth. And it’s going to take a team effort—from communities to individuals, from public health to health care—to keep people healthy.

That’s where you come in.

If you’re going to the games or live within 30 miles of a stadium, we would love to hear from you. Sign up for a weekly survey here. Thanks to the more than 1,280 people who have already signed up…you will be hearing from us soon!!


Global disease “weather report”

Hantavirus: Two more cases

The global count of cruise ship passengers with hantavirus has now increased to 13 cases (11 confirmed), with three deaths. The two new cases are overseas and among people who were already quarantining:

  1. A crew member in the Netherlands.

  2. A Spanish national passenger who was quarantining at home tested positive through daily monitoring. They are now in a biocontainment unit.

In the U.S., everyone remains negative.

There may be more cases, given that the incubation period of hantavirus (the time from exposure to infection) is 45 days. But this week, we will reach a major milestone: the median incubation window is 18 days, and that will pass on May 29.

Timeline of the hantavirus outbreak and the end of quarantine. Image created by Your Local Epidemiologist.

What this means for you: Your risk from this cruise ship outbreak remains essentially nil at this point.

Ebola rages on in Central Africa

Big thanks to Dr. Craig Spencer, a humanitarian physician who has treated and survived Ebola, for jumping in to provide the YLE community with an update. Craig, take it from here…

The combined confirmed and suspected Ebola cases in DRC are now more than 1,000. All signs are pointing to a very long and catastrophic outbreak in Central Africa:

  1. This is a vast undercount. We know this because the test positivity rate is hovering around 50%, only 20% of contacts are being traced (and in some areas, no contacts at all), and more cases keep popping up with no known connection. This all points to widespread and undetected community transmission.

  2. This is in only a week of detection. Compared to previous outbreaks, the growth is very fast, as the huge West Africa outbreak in 2016 was first detected at 49 cases and rose to 208 cases a month later. It took four months for that outbreak to reach the size of the current one in the DR Congo.

  3. The cases are spread out across 16 health zones. There are now multiple epicenters, making containment very difficult.

Next door in Uganda, the case count is seven. While this number is low compared to DRC, a concerning development is that two health care workers recently tested positive with uncertain exposure histories. If they weren’t treating known Ebola cases, this means it’s spreading undetected in Uganda as well.

On the ground, backlash, including the burning of health centers, has emerged, a pattern seen in nearly every outbreak and rooted in deep community distrust. It often stems from outside actors working in communities without fully understanding or addressing local priorities. Affected populations may recognize the severity of Ebola while still holding other concerns as more pressing, such as where their loved ones are buried. Community trust is essential to an effective response, but difficult to build during an active emergency. It is best established long before a crisis begins.

U.S. priorities are made clear, and may backfire. The U.S. Administration has shown that its first priority is keeping Ebola out, with helping end the outbreak in the DRC a secondary concern. That's meant travel restrictions broader than anything we've imposed before — covering travelers from across the region, and reportedly some green card holders and permanent residents as well.

For example, just these past two days, news broke that high-risk American travelers will be subject to a mandatory quarantine in Kenya before they are allowed to return. If an American is infected, the U.S. government plans to send them to a hospital it is standing up from scratch in Kenya. (Currently, Americans who were in the area are allowed to return but are diverted to three airports—Houston, Atlanta, and DC—for further screening.) Past administrations have used travel notices and stepped-up screening; this goes much further.

At first blush, these strict precautions may sound prudent. But this approach could backfire in three ways:

  1. Restrictions this blunt give people every reason to hide where they’ve been and whom they’ve been near — making the people we most need to find harder to track, not easier.

  2. They also breed a false sense that this is someone else’s problem. But diseases are humbling. They find the small cracks in even the most impenetrable-seeming defenses.

  3. Lives lost. There is no treatment for this Ebola strain, which means survival depends heavily on the quality of the health system. We have that system in the States, but we are choosing not to use it for infected Americans.

This is unbelievable and infuriating. (See a deeper dive from me here.)

The only real way to lower the risk to Americans — and everyone else — is to end the outbreak in the DRC and across the region.

What this means for you: If you have 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. There is also great uncertainty if and when the Administration will let you back in.

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


U.S. disease “weather report”

Ticks: past peak season?

Good news, especially for people in the Northeast and Midwest: tick numbers continue to decline. Though we are at the peak of the season, this unusually early year is trending favorably.

Source: CDC; Annotated by Hannah at Your Local Epidemiologist.

Heat-related illnesses in the North

Heat risk is certainly not blanketing the entire country yet, but this week it will be moderate in the Midwest and the Southeast.

Source: CDC; Annotated by Hannah at Your Local Epidemiologist.

What this means for you: Be sure to check the CDC 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.

Common colds surging

As far as respiratory viruses go, the only thing really going around right now is the common cold. It is higher this year than last year, but should peak very soon before returning this fall.

Source: CDC; Annotated by Hannah at Your Local Epidemiologist

Spotlight: Chemical plants

Over the weekend, YLE California covered the serious situation that unfolded around a chemical plant in Orange County, California. Thankfully, the worst-case scenario (a chemical explosion) was mitigated, but only through luck. The health implications in a densely populated area could have been catastrophic.

As the situation was winding down, another chemical explosion struck Washington State. This one was fatal. Health officials say the risk to surrounding residents from chemicals in the air and ground remains low, though the community deserves far greater clarity.

Clean air and clean water consistently rank as Americans’ top public health concerns — yet when chemical disasters strike, communities are too often met with reassurances rather than transparency and accountability. Residents near the 2023 East Palestine, Ohio train derailment, for example, are still waiting to understand the long-term impact on their health, with few clear answers.

What this means for you: Many are wondering if facilities processing potentially dangerous materials are in their neighborhoods. This interactive map allows you to enter your ZIP code and see all facilities monitored by the EPA, including any violations.


Good news

  • Ebola vaccines and treatment for the Bundibugyo species are in development. Two vaccine platforms are being explored, at least one of which may be deployable in as little as 2 months. One vaccine is being developed by Oxford, and the other uses the same biotechnology as the FDA-approved Zaire species of Ebola. (It may provide cross-protection, but it’s unclear at this point.) On the treatment side, two promising monoclonal antibody cocktails are likely to be deployed, though doses are limited and logistical hurdles remain significant challenges. Anni over at The Biotech Tea had a great explainer about the Ebola vaccine gap, if you want to read more.

  • Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) has been officially renamed polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome (PMOS), following more than a decade of debate and input from roughly 22,000 clinicians, researchers, and patients worldwide. This is good because the old name was medically misleading, leading to patients without visible cysts being dismissed or overlooked entirely. The WHO estimates that 70% of people with the condition remain undiagnosed. A more accurate name should improve recognition, reduce stigma, and ultimately help the millions of people living with this condition get diagnosed and treated sooner.


Public health situations are everywhere right now. Staying healthy takes public health professionals and systems working tirelessly behind the scenes and each of us showing up for our neighbors and communities.

Love, YLE

Big thanks to Ed Nirenberg for staying on top of the Ebola vaccines, Hannah Totte for all the figures, Dr. Craig Spencer for the Ebola insight, and Dr. Matt Willis for covering the chemical situation in CA.

Your Local Epidemiologist (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.