Lee Zeldin Promoting Massive COVID Super-spreader Event

Screen Shot 2020-06-18 at 9.23.11 PMThe reelection campaign for U.S. President Donald Trump required attendees reserving tickets for a June 20, 2020, rally in Tulsa to agree they will not sue the campaign or event organizers should they be exposed to COVID-19 at the event. Confirmed by Snopes!

You can’t make this stuff up.

Congressman Lee Zeldin of New York is going to Oklahoma to be on stage and rally with the President.

At a time when we’re trying to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, Lee Zeldin is promoting a massive super-spreader event that will surely make people sick.

At a time when millions of Americans are calling for racial justice and civil rights, Lee Zeldin is cheering on Donald Trump’s barely-concealed dog-whistles to his racist supporters.

At a time when America is calling out for leadership, Lee Zeldin is groveling for Donald Trump’s praise.

There’s no doubt: We must end Lee Zeldin’s career in Congress!

He doesn’t represent us. He doesn’t work for us. He doesn’t even stand up for himself.

I’ll always, always, always put Long Island first.

PERRY GERSHON

Posted in Coronavirus, Trump, Uncategorized, Zeldin | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Lee Zeldin Promoting Massive COVID Super-spreader Event

Early Voting in Suffolk County, NY

Useful info from the Board Of Elections website for the Democratic Primary Election: https://suffolkcountyny.gov/Departments/BOE/Early-Voting-Sites-6-23-2020

Screen Shot 2020-06-13 at 12.23.10 PM

I strongly urge either early voting or mailing in your absentee ballot.  This is because they are expecting a huge turn out: about 40,000 voters compared with the prior record of 25,000 voters in the 2018 Dem. primary.  Combine a large turnout with a reduced number of polling places and confusion because people can’t find their newly assigned polling places…   You see what I mean.

 

Addendum:

I VOTED!  Sunday morning at 11 AM, June 14th. No lines. I was the only voter at the election site in East Hampton (Windmill Village). Over 1.5 days only 42 people had voted early at this site.  Everyone wore masks and gloves and observed 6′ distancing, and it felt safer than going to the grocery store.

Posted in Fair elections, Uncategorized, voting by mail | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Early Voting in Suffolk County, NY

Voting for Delegates

IMG_6976

We received our mail-in ballots.  I asked whether we should vote for all 6 delegate candidates. It is confusing for many of us.  For example, under Biden’s name, there are 6 candidate delegates listed, see above.

I had received different opinions and someone suggested that voting for all 6 delegate choices defeats your purpose?

Since I personally know one of the delegates I asked them and got the following response:

Biden’s allocation of delegates will be based on the percentage of the total votes that HE gets.  This is quite separate from the number of votes each delegate receives. The number of votes each delegate receives will determine who is elected delegate, in descending order, alternating by gender.  ie, if 10,000 total votes are cast for POTUS and Biden gets 5,000 votes, he will get 1/2 of the number of delegates in the 1st congressional district (CD NY-01).  If you “bullet vote” the delegates (vote for only 2 or 3 out of 6) you increase the chances of those specific delegates of being elected. 

 

Posted in Uncategorized, voting by mail | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Voting for Delegates

Don’t Waste This Moment

Printed as a Letter to the Editor in The East Hampton Star, June 11 edition

Transformation
East Hampton
June 8, 2020

To The Star:

Three and a half years of the Trump administration have left America reeling, its values and ideals subverted and sabotaged. But the best of America is still here, too, embodied in each of us who wants to see our country live up to its promise: It is in the hospital janitor, the supermarket clerk, the doctor, the bus driver, the first responder, who all courageously go to work every day during a pandemic; it is in the teacher who Zooms into the lives of students; it is in the peaceful protesters who march and make their voices heard even though they risk a virulent virus, and, at times, virulent cops, and it is in the police officers who do their jobs professionally and respectfully.

For those who believe that this country is better than the racism, the flouting of the rule of law, the incendiary tweets that are the hallmarks of the Trump administration, this can be a time of transformation, when we do the work that needs to be done: to face uncomfortable truths; to become knowledgeable about issues and elections on both the local and national levels; to hold elected officials accountable; and to make civic action a part of our daily lives.

Yes, this can be a transformative time for us. But if it is not, if this is simply an extraordinary moment that dissipates, if in November we do not resoundingly defeat Donald Trump and his renegade Republicans, then that truly will be the end of the grand American experiment in democracy.

Sincerely,

CAROL DEISTLER

Posted in 2020 elections, democrats, GOP, Trump, Trump atrocities, Uncategorized, Zeldin | Comments Off on Don’t Waste This Moment

Lee Zeldin’s Record

No matter where you live — Montauk or Manorville, Smithtown or Shirley, Patchogue or Port Jefferson — we all want our communities to thrive. To do that, we need a representative who puts our needs first: safe drinking water and well-paying jobs. Affordable healthcare and prescription drugs. A tax plan that works for working families. And decisions based on science, not donations. Although Zeldin says he’s fighting for us, his voting record says otherwise. Zeldin serves the needs of big business and the powerful few, not the working families in his district.

Check out the issues here.  For example healthcare.

NY-01 deserves a representative who puts us first.

Photo Courtesy of Sean P. Mills Photography

Photo Courtesy of Sean P. Mills Photography


VOTES DON’T LIE. FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL.

Posted in Coronavirus, East Hampton, economics, Health Care, immigration/deportation, Medicaid, medicare, Trump, Uncategorized, Zeldin | Tagged , | Comments Off on Lee Zeldin’s Record

Lowe’s or Home Depot? Your call.

Screen Shot 2020-06-09 at 9.48.45 PMMarvin Ellison, is the CEO of Lowe’s

Lowe’s announced Wednesday that it would assist minority-owned businesses with $25 million in grants to support efforts to relaunch the American economy.

Lowe’s is dishing out the funds to help small businesses, especially home improvement professionals, in need of masks, personal protective equipment and other supplies to operate safely. The new funds follow $340 million of support the home improvement retailer provided for Covid-19 response activities in the first quarter.

By contrast in regard to Home Depot (this from 2019):

Home Depot sought to distance itself from billionaire co-founder Bernie Marcus after he pledged to back President Trump’s bid for re-election in 2020.

Calls to boycott the retailer took off as news spread that Marcus told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that he plans to support Trump’s bid for another term.

“If you plan on buying a hammer, wood, or ANY home improvement items from Home Depot, you may as well send donations DIRECTLY to trump’s 2020 campaign,” read one tweet under the hashtag #BoycottHomeDepot.

By Betsy Cagan | President| Bargaining Power Inc., New York, NY 10011,  bargainingpower.com

 

 

Posted in Coronavirus, economics, economy, Uncategorized | Tagged , | Comments Off on Lowe’s or Home Depot? Your call.

Anxiety, or A Day in the Life of a Covid-Vulnerable

IMG_5979May.  Late morning, midweek.  Parked at the curb of our village post office, I was in the passenger seat waiting for my gloved-and-masked husband to return with our mailbox key and any mail.  I noticed a 30-something couple out bicycling.  Or rather watched them walking toward me, balancing their bikes, chatting away, shouting some “hellos” to a neighbor on her porch.  Walking closer.  No masks.  Not on. Not under the chin.  Not a scarf or bandana.

I rolled up my window.  A distinct feeling of nervousness pulsed through my chest.   Anger even.  It surprised me.  What a strong response. Danger. Danger.  Like a red blinking light. 

I would have liked to have been able to smile, to wave a neighborly “hello,” to nod a greeting of togetherness, enjoying the lovely spring day.

Instead I felt fear. 

 

To Be or Not To Be.

We had just returned from our once-a-week dart into town for essentials, stopping for pre-ordered, pre-paid, pick-ups, and at a few little open-air farm stands when we saw no cars, no customers, or we knew they had good safety procedures in place.  I had smiled at a handwritten chalkboard sign, I felt protected by my farm neighbors: NO MASK, No Entry. Stay Safe.

img_5936-1

No Mask No Entry

Throughout the day I felt jittery.  I couldn’t shake it.

Late afternoon a friend called.  I assumed she wanted to talk about the book club we had created together, an experiment to bring other like-minded women into our discussion on climate change, and ultimately to take action.  It’s all part of our ongoing work together with a grassroots group we call Drawdown East End .

I couldn’t stop myself from mentioning the bicyclists and my lingering unease. 

“Me too!” she said and rushed to tell me her story — her unsettling morning ocean walk, seeing young people bunched together, no masks of course.  What should I do?  Should I say something?  Should I notify someone?  I shared her uncertainty.   Wanting to do something she had started a conversation with a young woman beach walker, safe-distancing, motioning to the little huddle.  “Oh that’s my brother and all his buddies.  They’ve been together forever” she laughed.

“What to do?” my friend asked me.  Somehow the idea of protecting our community health — and economy — by wearing a mask was not getting through to younger people.

Don’t they know we live in a “hot spot?” A place where our infection numbers are going up, not down?  Don’t they know that our neighborhood stores, family restaurants, not to mention our schools, parks, beaches will only open when we get our numbers down?  Don’t they know that the hospitals here are overwhelmed, doctors and nurses inundated, exhausted? 

It felt good to at least share our common experience, to at least give it a name: anxiety.   

We didn’t actually talk about how invisible we felt, in our 70s, to younger people.   How our health didn’t seem to even be of any concern.

And we didn’t really dwell on how we felt — nervous.  Didn’t they know they could be carrying the virus and shedding?  Didn’t they know that as young healthy people they may never feel any symptoms, or they may be just be shrugging off a little sore throat, some muscle aches, a low fever — and shedding?  Didn’t they know we are counting on them, the young and healthy, to do the right thing?

I told my friend about a popular local business owner, a young father, who had to self-quarantine and deep-clean his store after one of his employees tested positive for coronavirus.  “I’m the CDC’s worst nightmare” he had told our town paper. “I feel great, never felt better, but here I am at home.  I had to have the test, and I’m positive.  I’m infectious and I would never have known it.”   I could feel my friend nodding in agreement.  “Infecting people without knowing” she said. “Everyone’s worst nightmare.”

My anger or anxiety or whatever it was did not subside.  It just loomed, like a fog. 

I checked in with a neighbor.  A little older than I, it has become a habit now to call and ask how she was doing.  Recently I joined her weekly meditation sitting.  “Why” she asked ”do you say you feel disrespected?  You are putting intention on an action which is unnecessary.  Perhaps these young people are just uninformed.  Ignorant of the facts.”  Her words seemed like a magic wand. That sinking feeling cleared. Right. Get the facts. Follow the science. That will help me out of this feeling of helplessness.

 

The Facts.

I share an interest in getting-the-facts with my husband.  Our Sundays include watching a favorite news show:  GPS with Fareed Zakaria.  This time his guest was surgeon Dr Atul Gawande who talked about how a Boston hospital guarded against Covid-19 in their crowded workplace.

“How did you do it?” asked Fareed.

Dr Gawand told how his hospital system of 75,000 people avoided transmitting the virus by everyone doing 4 key things, which, imperfect by themselves, become effective together, like a “drug cocktail.” 

  1. Hygiene/hand washing.
  2. Social distancing.
  3. Symptom screening (daily before work).

“Everyday before I go to work” Dr. Gawand said, “I go to a Web site on my phone….Do I have any of the symptoms of COVID-19? ….Do I have a sore throat? Do I have a runny nose? Not just a fever. Fever is present less than 40% of the time when symptoms start.”

When he has no symptoms, he gets a green pass to go to work.  If he has a symptom, like a runny nose, he stays home and calls in for testing.

Daily symptom screening. How smart.  Turns out that the CDC has a Covid-19 self-assessment tool.  I took it, curious to know all the symptoms:  cough, runny nose, shortness of breath, fever, chills, muscle pain, sore throat, new loss of taste or smell, nausea, diarrhea.  (Turns out that they take 2-14 days after exposure to the virus to appear.)

And, number 4.  Masks.   

Masks are vitally important, Dr. Gawande said, because sneezing, talking loud, even soft talking can project viral droplets, and wearing a mask blocks those droplets.  Further,  masks are important because they address the virus spread by the asymptomatic.   “You know, about half or more of the spread is from people who don’t have symptoms.  And those people who don’t have symptoms, they wear a mask and that prevents them from spreading to others.” 

A woman and a child in a protective surgical mask on their face are standing on the beach in swimsuits. Chinese coronavirus disease COVID-19 is dangerousI gasped.  Half or more of the spread is from the asymptomatic?  Do people know this? 

I asked my husband “do you know this?”  “Invisible spreaders” he commented.  How people are spreading Covid-19 without symptoms” popped up from VOX as I researched.  Half the people in Iceland who had the virus didn’t know it.  Others findings: people can start transmitting 24-48 hours before showing any symptoms, people were most infectious right before they started to show symptoms.  Infection rates go down 85% if you are wearing a mask.

 

The Solution.

Was the Boston hospital 4-part regime effective?  Very.  Data from one month showed that 50,000 employees did a daily check-up.  11,000 turned up with symptoms.  They all stayed home.  They all were tested.  Only 10% (1,400) tested positive, they self-quarantined 14 days until they tested negative.  Then they could return to work.  No spread.

Something Dr. Gawande said gave me hope: if 60% of us wear masks, do the 4 key things, we can shut down the virus.

Fareed Zakaria looked impressed.  “But is it — I mean, can we — will we do it?”

Dr. Gawande answered: “So, I think the answer is yes. But it is the hardest part of this journey…..”  The hospital culture that worked so well, he said, is “I never want to be the one to infect somebody and kill them.”

Thank you Dr. Gawande.  Yes. Me too. I never want to be the one to infect someone, injure or yikes, kill them.  I’m sure 60% of Americans feel that way too. I can count on “us.”

Do I feel less anxious now….with this new information on how to protect myself and img_5968others?  Yes. 

Hey, this just in — 89% of Americans say they wear a mask when out!

Now we just have to jump start daily symptom self-screenings.

 

Posted in climate change, Coronavirus, Health Care | Comments Off on Anxiety, or A Day in the Life of a Covid-Vulnerable

Huge Crowd in Bridgehampton: Justice for Floyd

This was easily the largest rally I have ever seen on the South Fork or in Suffolk County.  Official estimate according to the Patch.com about 1000 people.  Just imagine Main street (Rte 27) filled on both sides and on the sidewalks with protestors: from the Bridgehampton Community House to the Monument.  We marched the distance and back, twice.

The chants included: “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot”, “Black Lives Matter”, “Justice for Floyd,” “Silence = Violence”, “Be the Change”, “I can’t breathe.”  And the crowd lay on the street face down and hands in the back for eight minutes and 46 seconds, the time that Floyd begged for help.

The videos on the Patch.com are telling.  The story is also covered by the East Hampton Star.

Screen Shot 2020-06-03 at 11.02.35 AM

 

 

Posted in bigotry, Civil Rights, Discrimination, fascism, police, Trump atrocities, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Huge Crowd in Bridgehampton: Justice for Floyd

Recipe for Fundamental Social Change (from Judith Hope)

Everybody is missing the key element of this challenge.  Fundamental social change will not happen at the national level. (Although courageous and coherent national leadership would be really helpful.). It must come from the grassroots up. It must begin in local communities throughout the nation. For example :  how many of the following questions can any of us answer:

How many black law enforcement officers are on the East Hampton Police force?
What percentage is this of the local force?

How many black officers are on the Suffolk County law enforcement agency?  What percentage?

What is the extent and quality of local police training in Anti-Bias Law enforcement practices?

Does East Hampton have an Anti-Bias Task Force?
Are they active or merely window-dressing?

How many minorities are in local elected public office?

How many black citizens are on the Town/County Democratic and Republican Committees?
What are we doing to recruit more minorities onto the political committees?

You get the gist…. I will get off my soapbox now & I apologize. I have a former local official trapped inside me who occasionally demands to be heard!

Judith Hope

 

NB: just change the name of the town to “Anytown, Anystate, USA” and then send to your local newspaper!

 

 

Posted in bigotry, Coronavirus, Discrimination, East Hampton, police, Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Recipe for Fundamental Social Change (from Judith Hope)

Protesting the Callous Murder of George Floyd right here in Bridgehampton

PLEASE READ THIS MESSAGE IN ITS ENTIRETY
We are moved to action after the vicious and callous murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police. We stand in solidarity with our brothers and sisters all over the country who demand an end to racist policing. We call on all appropriate agencies to arrest the other three officers who watched former officer Derek Chauvin kneel on Mr. Floyd’s neck and ignored his cries for help. We also remember two other recent victims of deadly racism Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor and the sadly all too long list of other victims.

On Tuesday, June 2nd at 5pm, we will meet at the Bridgehampton Community House (2368 Montauk Highway, Bridgehampton, 11932). Please wear masks and social distance as possible. Bring signs.

We will then march from the community house to the monument. We will either do this once or twice depending on how many of us there are.
During the final part of the march, for those who are able, we will lay in the road on our stomachs with our hands behind our backs and repeat I can’t breathe for 8 minutes and 46 seconds, the amount of time George Floyd had a knee crushing his neck.
We know this is a difficult time and realize some would like to participate, but are at a higher risk for coronavirus….don’t worry, we got you! Please park your car on Montauk highway in Bridgehampton between the community house and the monument in either direction and put your sign outside your car facing the road. We would also ask marchers to do the same!
Black Lives Matter!
Note from Lisa Votino – All are welcome. Yes I am bringing my child. ❤ If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to me at  LMVotino@gmail.com.
Posted in bigotry, Civil Rights, Coronavirus, Discrimination, East Hampton, fascism, police, Trump atrocities, Uncategorized | Tagged , | Comments Off on Protesting the Callous Murder of George Floyd right here in Bridgehampton