The Big Reveal continues....
I laid out on the lanair watching the birds for far
too long Wednesday morning (4/8), so I just had time to make my tea before
SKYPE-ing with Janice. After that I put
my blog out and ran through my emails before making a bit of breakfast. I headed out to my hearing aid place around
lunch as my hearing aids were acting up.
I sat in the parking lot while Linda came and got them and took them in
to be fixed, then I made a quick bank stop before heading home.
Anne came over to get her custom designed
masks….how could I not make her purple ones if I had any hope of her wearing
them :~):
It was early afternoon when I finally made it
to the studio…I’m continuing to make masks as there are
many people who still need one…here’s a tutorial on the newest style:
Cut out a 9’’ by 7’’ piece of flannel and the
same of cotton fabric:
Place them right
sides together and sew a quarter inch seam on both of the short sides (with the
flannel on the bottom as you are sewing):
Turn to the right side and press:
Sew around the rectangle (again with flannel on the bottom), a quarter
inch seam along the long side, and a wider seam along the short sides (this is
forming your casing where the ties will go).
I pinked the top and bottom of the mask to prevent fraying after the
first wash (I have a ‘pinking’ rotary cutter blade):
Then thread your ties (I made mine 36 ‘’
long) through and you’re good to go….since I’m all out of rope type ties….I’m
using ribbon OR selvages :~):
Michael came home around 4 PM (he had a very
late tee time) and after a shower, headed out to pick up our fish sandwiches
for dinner.
If this weren’t true it would be totally unbelievable…we
don’t have a leader, we have a cheerleader:
President
Trump said Tuesday that he did not learn of two memos written in January and
February by his own economic adviser warning that a COVID-19 pandemic
could kill as many as 2 million Americans until “maybe a day ago.”
“I heard he
wrote some memos talking about pandemic,” Trump said during a White House
coronavirus task force briefing, “I didn’t see them. I didn’t look for them,
either.”
On Jan. 29,
Peter Navarro warned his colleagues at the White House that if the
administration did not mount an aggressive containment strategy for the
coronavirus, it could kill more than half a million Americans and cost the
country nearly $6 trillion.
Nearly a
month later, on Feb. 23, Navarro distributed an even more dire second memo in
which he said as many as 100 million Americans could be infected with COVID-19,
which might kill upwards of 2 million U.S. citizens.
On Feb. 27,
Trump briefed the country on the coronavirus outbreak, assuring Americans that
it was well under control.
“When you
have 15 people,” Trump said of the number of reported cases in the U.S. at the
time, “and the 15 within a couple of days is going to be close to zero, that’s
a pretty good job we’ve done.”
Pressed on
whether he had been apprised of Navarro’s warnings, the president said Tuesday
he had not.
“I asked him
about it just a little while ago, because I read something about a memo,” Trump
recalled. “I said, ‘Did you do a memo?’ I didn’t look for, I didn’t see it,
I didn’t ask for him to show it to me.”
Navarro has
no medical background or national security brief; he is an economist and
director of trade and manufacturing policy for the administration. On Monday,
he got into a heated exchange with CNN anchor John Berman over his advocacy of
the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID-19, something Trump has also
promoted. Navarro insisted to Berman that he was qualified to have an informed
position. "Doctors disagree about things all the time,” he said. “My
qualifications in terms of looking at the science is that I'm a social
scientist. I have a PhD. And I understand how to read statistical studies.”
For weeks,
as the number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 steadily spread across the
country, Trump has stood at the briefing podium and insisted the pandemic caused
by the coronavirus, the “invisible enemy,” could not have been foreseen.
“Nobody
knew there would be a pandemic or epidemic of this proportion,” Trump said on
March 19.
But
confronted with the existence of Navarro’s memos, the president shifted his explanation.
“Nobody said, It’s going to happen, but there is a possibility, there always
has been a possibility, but people wouldn’t talk about it,” Trump said.
Asked when
he first learned about Navarro’s warnings, Trump said “maybe a day ago, two
days ago.” Their existence was first reported Monday by
Axios.
Trump has
been criticized for repeatedly portraying the coronavirus outbreak as “under
control,” and likening it to the common flu at a time when the virus was
gaining a foothold in the U.S. On Tuesday, he sought to explain his rosy
assessments of the pandemic that has brought American life to a grinding halt
while infecting nearly 400,000 Americans and killing more than 13,000.
“The cases
really didn’t build up for a while, but you have to understand, I’m a
cheerleader for this country. I don’t want to create havoc and shock and
everything else, but ultimately when I was saying that I’m also closing [travel
from China] down,” Trump said, adding, “I’m not going to go out and start
screaming, This could happen, this could happen. So, again as president, I
think a president has to be a cheerleader for their country.”
Trump also
said he had still not read Navarro’s memos.
“I basically
did what the memo said, which was a pretty good memo from the standpoint that
he talked about, I guess, I didn’t see it yet.”
Trump has always been an “I’m the
greatest’’, ‘’shoot from the hip’’, ‘‘don’t bother me with the facts when I’ve
got a gut feeling’’ kind of guy, but this time it has backfired on the American
people and we are the ones who are suffering because of it.
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