Top Items:
The Daily Beast:
Trump to New York: You've Been Mean to Me, Drop Dead — Democratic governors, including Andrew Cuomo, are grappling with a coronavirus-related fear: piss off the president and risk losing his support. — As the coronavirus pandemic has deepened, Democratic governors bearing the heaviest burdens …
Discussion:
PJ Media Home, CNN, Contemptor, Gothamist and Balloon Juice
RELATED:
Jennifer Senior / New York Times:
Trump to New York: Drop Dead — Untold thousands will likely die, absent federal intervention. And it needs to happen this instant. Why won't the president help? — So it's essentially come to this: President Trump is treating each of our 50 states as individual contestants on …
Discussion:
Raw Story
Washington Post:
Stimulus bill prevents Trump and his family from benefiting from loan programs — Businesses controlled by President Trump and his children would be prohibited from receiving loans or investments from Treasury Department programs included in a $2 trillion stimulus plan agreed to early Wednesday …
RELATED:
New York Times:
Congress and White House Strike Deal for $2 Trillion Stimulus Package — The plan would provide direct payments to taxpayers, jobless benefits and a $500 billion fund to assist distressed businesses, with oversight requirements demanded by Democrats. — WASHINGTON — Senators …
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo, Politico, Gothamist, Slate, PJ Media Home and NBC News
Chelsea Mes / Bloomberg:
Trump-Owned Companies Banned From Virus Aid in Stimulus Bill
Trump-Owned Companies Banned From Virus Aid in Stimulus Bill
Discussion:
Raw Story
Paul Kane / Washington Post:
At the Capitol, palpable fear from a more insidious enemy than past crises
Rebecca Shabad / NBC News:
Pelosi reacts to coronavirus stimulus deal, doesn't say when or how House will vote
Pelosi reacts to coronavirus stimulus deal, doesn't say when or how House will vote
Discussion:
The Hill, MSNBC, Le·gal In·sur·rec· tion and TheBlaze
Media Matters for America:
Fox's Brit Hume says it's an “entirely reasonable viewpoint” to expect that grandparents would be willing to die to protect the economy — Hume: “We don't shut down the economy to save every single life that's threatened by a wide-spread disease. We just don't”
Washington Post:
Scramble for medical equipment descends into chaos as U.S. states and hospitals compete for rare supplies — With prices rising and supplies uncertain, governors and health-care officials are urging the Trump administration to use the Defense Production Act to bring order
Discussion:
Raw Story and New York Post
RELATED:
New York Times:
Slow Response to the Coronavirus Measured in Lost Opportunity — If the administration had reacted to the ventilator shortage in February, a private sector effort starting now might have made lifesaving equipment in mid- to late April. Now it is unlikely to be before June.
Discussion:
American Prospect, Dallas Morning News, The Week and National Review
Washington Post:
Senate aid package quietly carves out billions intended for Boeing, officials say — Provision for company ‘critical’ to national security targets airplane maker, despite Max safety lapses — Lawmakers have inserted a little-noticed provision in the Senate's $2 trillion stimulus package aimed …
Media Matters for America:
Glenn Beck says older Americans should return to work: “Even if we all get sick, I would rather die than kill the country” — Beck: “I would rather have my children stay home and all of us who are over 50 go in and keep this economy going” — Sean Hannity pushes unproven drugs to fight coronavirus: “What are the risks?
RELATED:
Matt Wilstein / The Daily Beast:
Glenn Beck Says He'd ‘Rather Die Than Kill the Country’
ProPublica:
Walmart Was Almost Charged Criminally Over Opioids. Trump Appointees Killed the Indictment. — Even as company pharmacists protested, Walmart kept filling suspicious prescriptions, stoking the country's opioid epidemic. A Republican U.S. Attorney in Texas thought the evidence was damning.
New Orleans Times-Picayune:
'It's like a war zone': Fighting coronavirus, limited ICU beds, bracing for chaos in New Orleans — With hospital beds quickly filling up, workers being forced to ration critical supplies like N95 masks and Gov. John Bel Edwards warning federal officials that a rising tide of coronavirus patients …
RELATED:
Elisha Fieldstadt / NBC News:
New Orleans is a center of coronavirus. Mardi Gras could be to blame, doctors say.
New Orleans is a center of coronavirus. Mardi Gras could be to blame, doctors say.
Discussion:
Office of Governor …, Talking Points Memo and The Independent
Noah Goldberg / New York Daily News:
NYC paramedic hospitalized with coronavirus sedated, breathing with ventilator as condition worsens, family says — FDNY EMS paramedic Christell Cadet ― who shared her coronavirus struggle with the world last week from her hospital bed ― is now unable to breathe comfortably …
Jessica Lustig / New York Times:
What I Learned When My Husband Got Sick With Coronavirus — Our world became one of isolation, round-the-clock care, panic and uncertainty — even as society carried on around us with all too few changes. — “How are you doing, love?” I call to my husband from the living-room floor …
New York Times:
Coronavirus Is Advancing. All Americans Need to Shelter in Place. — The worst of the pandemic is yet to come. Listen to the medical experts. It's time for a national lockdown. — The editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values.
Discussion:
Washington Monthly, The Hill and Raw Story
David Von Drehle / Washington Post:
I probably have a ‘mild to moderate’ case of covid-19. I don't think I could survive worse. — KANSAS CITY — I am thankful for my mild to moderate symptoms. — Are they covid-19 symptoms? I certainly think so. I've been reading descriptions of other cases, mild to moderate …
Boston Herald:
We will remember Dems' stimulus holdup — Some of our leaders have acquitted themselves well during the coronavirus pandemic, like Gov. Charlie Baker, who issued a stay-at-home advisory this week in Massachusetts to curtail the disease's spread. — And then there are the Democrats on Capitol Hill …
RELATED:
Wall Street Journal:
Is the Coronavirus as Deadly as They Say? — Current estimates about the Covid-19 fatality rate may be too high by orders of magnitude. — If it's true that the novel coronavirus would kill millions without shelter-in-place orders and quarantines, then the extraordinary measures being carried …
Discussion:
Cafe Hayek
Stephanie Yang / Wall Street Journal:
‘My World Collapsed With a Bang’: How the Coronavirus Ravaged a Family — A Lunar New Year dinner left six family members infected; a hallmark of the virus is the way it has spread within families — The last message Li Song received from her husband was a hand emoji of the OK sign …
Sean Sullivan / Washington Post:
Insiders recount how Sanders lost the black vote — and the nomination slipped away — Bernie Sanders reached the pinnacle of his campaign inside Cowboys Dancehall in San Antonio on Feb. 22. He pumped his fist to punctuate a triumphant speech. He'd just won the Nevada caucuses and was sitting …
New York Times:
Oracle Providing White House With Software to Study Unproven Coronavirus Drugs — The online platform could allow physicians to upload patient data on how malaria drugs perform on coronavirus patients. — WASHINGTON — The White House is preparing to use software provided …
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, ZDNet and The Federalist
RELATED:
Michelle L. Price / Las Vegas Sun:
Sisolak bars malaria drugs for coronavirus patients
Sisolak bars malaria drugs for coronavirus patients
Discussion:
National Review and KLAS - 8 News Now
KTLA:
Mayor Garcetti announces water and power will be shut off for nonessential L.A. businesses that don't close — Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti opened his daily briefing Tuesday recognizing what may have been the first teenage COVID-19 death in L.A. County and went on to announce actions …
Discussion:
Townhall, The Gateway Pundit, TheBlaze, Breitbart, Los Angeles Times, CBS Los Angeles, WFLA-TV and ABC7
Rick Rouan / The Columbus Dispatch:
Ohio stops daily reporting of new unemployment claims at request of Trump administration — Ohio will no longer release its growing unemployment claim numbers on a daily basis as the economy slumps through the COVID-19 outbreak after the Trump administration told states to hold the statistics for weekly reports.
CNN:
A group of young adults held a coronavirus party in Kentucky to defy orders to socially distance. Now one of them has coronavirus — (CNN)At least one person in Kentucky is infected after taking part at a “coronavirus party” with a group of young adults, Gov. Andy Beshear said Tuesday.
Discussion:
The Week
Eric Felten / RealClearInvestigations:
Accused in Justice Dept.'s Upper Echelon, and Innocent Until Scot-Free — Above, a crime lab depicted in the trailer for 1959's “The F.B.I. Story” — It wasn't the first time the FBI attorney had been in the Marine Corps Base Quantico Exchange. Nor was that day in February 2018 …
Discussion:
Real Clear Politics
Josh Carter / WAFB-TV:
Waffle House closes 365 locations across the U.S. — JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) - Waffle House has now closed 365 locations across the U.S. due to the coronavirus pandemic. — The breakfast-chain announced the news on their Facebook page Tuesday morning. — While more than 300 locations have closed, 1,627 remain open.
Discussion:
Twitchy
Lucía Benavides / NPR:
Spanish Military Finds Dead Bodies And Seniors ‘Completely Abandoned’ In Care Homes — The Spanish military has found older residents of some care homes “completely abandoned” and even “dead in their beds,” Defense Minister Margarita Robles said in a television interview on Monday.
Discussion:
Althouse
ProPublica:
Even After Trump Declared a National Emergency, Some Talk Radio Hosts Weren't Convinced — More than 160 million Americans have been urged to stay home in what the World Health Organization has declared a global pandemic. Nonessential businesses and schools in states like New York, Illinois and California have shuttered.
Bloomberg:
More Than 750,000 Masks Auctioned for Huge Markup While Hospitals Run Out — Texas bidding site sells 750,000 of them during dire shortage — Website owner received cease-and-desist order against auction — At a time when shortages of protective gear are putting health-care workers at risk …
Discussion:
New York Times, Sputnik News, ABC News, Vox, Talking Points Memo and New York Post
Alana Goodman / Washington Free Beacon:
Harvard, Boasting $40 Billion Endowment, Lays Off Dining Hall Workers Due to Coronavirus — Harvard University, which has the largest endowment of any school in the country, is cutting its subcontracted dining hall workers without pay as it shuts down in response to the coronavirus pandemic.
Alan Cross / The Bulwark:
Our Parents Are Not Expendable — For the past few days, concerns about the collapsing economy have led to a growing discussion among some about how much we should realistically do to protect the elderly and more vulnerable among us from COVID-19. — The basic question emerging …
Josh Gerstein / Politico:
Those who intentionally spread coronavirus could be charged as terrorists — People who intentionally spread the coronavirus could face criminal charges under federal terrorism laws, the Justice Department's No. 2 official said Tuesday. — In a memo to top Justice Department leaders …
Discussion:
Kaiser Health News, The Independent, The Hill and VICE
The Daily Beast:
Falwell Misled Me on Reopening Liberty University, City Manager Says — The Lynchburg City manager said that the university's president, Jerry Falwell, was not “totally transparent” with her about opening up the dorms again. — When Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr. announced …
Discussion:
Associated Press, Liberty University, The Hill, Fox News, fox8.com, The Independent and Raw Story
Yusra Murad / Morning Consult:
As Trump Eyes Restarting Economy, Nearly 3 in 4 Voters Support National Quarantine — Majority of Democrats, independents and Republicans back pause on nonessential trips — People stand in freshly painted circles, six-feet-apart, as they wait in a two-hour line to buy marijuana products …