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The California health official who issued the country’s first shelter-in-place order has expressed concern over a possible surge in coronavirus cases there and says the state may be reopening too quickly.

Speaking to the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday, Dr. Sara Cody, health officer for Santa Clara County, said she was troubled by the state now allowing gatherings of 100 people for various purposes and noted that the pace at which the state is reopening at large is “concerning.”

LOUISIANA CHILD’S POSSIBLE CORONAVIRUS-LINKED MIS-C DEATH THE FIRST IN STATE

“This announcement to authorize county health officers to allow religious, cultural, and political gatherings of 100 people poses a very serious risk of the spread of COVID-19,” Cody told the board on Tuesday, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Her remarks came after the California Department of Public Health earlier this week announced the statewide reopening of places of worship for religious services as well as in-store retail shopping — albeit under certain guidelines.

On Tuesday, state health officials also announced that counties “that have attested to meeting the criteria for accelerated reopening” can begin to reopen hair salons and barbershops under certain restrictions as well, including the mandatory use of face masks.

But the broader easing of restrictions raises a red flag for Cody, who has been credited with creating the nation’s first shelter-in-place order. San Francisco Bay Area’s regional shelter-in-place order affected nearly 7 million people across six counties, according to the newspaper. The broader state of California quickly followed the model, as did other hard-hit states like New York.

“The state has shifted away from the stay-at-home model and has made significant modifications with increasing frequency,” since the beginning of May, Cody said.

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“The pace at which the state has made these modifications is concerning to me,” she added, noting California could possibly see a surge in cases linked to the fast-paced reopenings. (Experts speaking to the San Francisco Chronicle, for instance, said a recent spike in cases in the Bay Area may be linked to the loosening of restrictions there.)

Speaking to the various counties across the state entering Phase 2 of reopening, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, whose reopening strategy has also faced criticism from some lawmakers, said the state is “not looking back.”

“We’re making progress, we’re moving forward. We’re not looking back, but we are walking into the unknown, the untested… and we have to be guided by the data that brought us back to this place,” Newsom said during a Tuesday briefing. 

The news comes as California this week became the fourth state to surpass 100,000 coronavirus cases, with the Golden State reporting 2,908 cases on Tuesday — reportedly it’s highest daily total to date. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/health/california-re-opening-too-quickly-state-health-official-warns

The Five” co-host Marie Harf said Thursday that President Trump’s executive order aimed at social media companies was an effort to “troll Twitter.”

“The real question for Twitter,” Harf said, “is whether they are comfortable with their platform being used by anyone — including the president — to promote hateful, violent, dangerous or outright fabrications to millions of people and that’s a really hard question.”

Accompanied by Attorney General Bill Barr, Trump signed an order calling for new regulations under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996 (CDA) that would remove statutory liability protections and cut federal funding for tech companies that engage in censorship and political conduct.

TRUMP SIGNS SOCIAL MEDIA EXECUTIVE ORDER THAT CALLS FOR REMOVAL OF LIABILITY PROTECTIONS OVER ‘CENSORING’

The president’s order came just two days after Twitter took the unprecedented step of slapping a “misleading” warning label on two of his tweets about the fraud risks of nationwide mail-in balloting.

The move immediately backfired, with experts disputing that Trump’s tweet was in fact misleading, since mail-in balloting has been linked to ongoing fraud. Additionally, Twitter’s fact-check itself contained false statements; and Twitter failed to apply the standard of review to other users.

At Thursday’s signing ceremony, Trump called the fact-check “egregious,” and held up a photo of Twitter executive Yoel Roth, who heads up the site’s fact-checking and rules-making operation. Fox News reported on Wednesday that Roth has mocked Trump supporters, called Trump’s team “ACTUAL NAZIS,” slammed “scary trannies” in New York City, and called GOP Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell a “bag of farts.” (In a statement, Twitter did not dispute Fox News’ reporting, but called the messages by Roth “unfortunate.”)

“My executive order calls for new regulations under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to make it so that social media companies that engage in censoring any political conduct will not be able to keep their liability shield,” the president said.

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Harf said that Trump’s action is “not a legal one, but a political one.”

“It’s his favorite kind of political action. It’s grievance politics,” Harf concluded.

Co-host Lawrence Jones responded to Harf, saying that Twitter’s mission statement is to “share information and content without barriers.”

“This is a new barrier,” Jones said. “They’re trying to be the one between the content creator and the people that they’re trying to reach.”

Jones added that Trump’s order was not meant to shut down Twitter, but rather bring awareness to a “big issue.”

“Me, as a conservative, I believe that this is a private company. They can do whatever they want to do,” Jones said. “But I think it is a bad business practice to violate their mission statement.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/marie-harf-trump-social-media-grievance-politics

Tensions between China and the U.S. have risen lately as Trump criticizes the Chinese government’s response to the coronavirus outbreak. U.S. lawmakers have also been critical of China increasing its stronghold over Hong Kong.

Paul Christopher, head of global market strategy at Wells Fargo, said he expects more rhetoric from the U.S. regarding Hong Kong and China, noting: “It could end up being a headwind once the market finishes pricing in all of this hopium.”

Futures also fell after Salesforce issued disappointing guidance for the second quarter. The company expects earnings ranging between 66 cents a share and 67 cents a share. Analysts polled by FactSet expected earnings guidance of 74 cents per share. Salesforce shares dropped 4%.

The Dow closed Thursday’s session down nearly 150 points, or 0.6%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite lost 0.2% and 0.5%, respectively.

Despite those losses, the major averages remained on pace for solid weekly gains. The Dow and S&P 500 are up more than 2.7% each week to date while the Nasdaq has advanced 0.5%.

That weekly advance comes as traders increase bets on a successful reopening of the economy.

“The market has discounted the coronavirus very quickly and has correctly predicted the apex of the virus,” said Mike Katz, partner at Seven Points Capital. “Having said all that, prices are up there. The S&P 500 trading above 3,000 is pricing in a full recovery.”

“If there is a second wave of the virus that ends up being more detrimental than people think, then I would think the S&P 500 is not valued correctly,” said Katz.

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/28/stock-market-futures-open-to-close-news.html

· Hair salons, barbershops, hair braiders, spas, tattoo parlors, nail salons, waxing centers and cosmetology schools are among the personal care services that can reopen, but they must limit services to those that can be performed with both the customer and the employee wearing a facial covering over their nose and mouth.

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/coronavirus/ct-cb-coronavirus-illinois-reopening-phase-three-20200528-ls7pp6s4w5caphqyabyuxfgtse-story.html

“For all of the political hacks out there, if I hadn’t done my job well, & early, we would have lost 1 1/2 to 2 Million People, as opposed to the 100,000 plus that looks like will be the number,” Trump wrote Tuesday. “That’s 15 to 20 times more than we will lose. I shut down entry from China very early!”

In a subsequent message, the president acknowledged that “One person lost to this invisible virus is too much,” but insisted he “made the right decisions” and ridiculed “Crazy Nancy” Pelosi, the House speaker.

Trump was roundly rebuked over the weekend, as the U.S. deaths continued to mount, for golfing at his Virginia club and leveling incendiary attacks at several of his perceived enemies via Twitter — even repeating his claim that MSNBC host Joe Scarborough murdered a congressional staffer in 2001. The president has offered no evidence to support the allegation, which has been widely debunked as a conspiracy theory that is not supported by facts.

As of Thursday morning, more than 1.7 million people have become infected with Covid-19 in the U.S., the global epicenter of the coronavirus pandemic, and 100,467 Americans have died from the disease, according to a Johns Hopkins University tracker.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/05/28/trump-acknowledges-100000-coronavirus-deaths-286976

President Trump’s latest confrontation with Twitter was set off after the tech company placed fact-checking warnings on two of his tweets.

Evan Vucci/AP


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Evan Vucci/AP

President Trump’s latest confrontation with Twitter was set off after the tech company placed fact-checking warnings on two of his tweets.

Evan Vucci/AP

Updated at 7:16 p.m. ET

President Trump signed an executive order Thursday aimed at limiting the broad legal protections enjoyed by social media companies, two days after he tore into Twitter for fact-checking two of his tweets.

“We’re here today to defend free speech from one of the gravest dangers it has faced in American history, frankly,” Trump said from the Oval Office. “A small handful of powerful social media monopolies control the vast portion of all private and public communications in the United States.”

The president said the tech companies have “unchecked power to censor, restrict, edit, shape, hide, alter” a large sphere of human interaction. “They have points of view,” he said.

The Trump administration hopes the order will eventually set the stage for new regulations on tech platforms such as Twitter and Facebook.

But legal experts said they were doubtful the move would have any practical effect on the tech giants. Legal observers described the action as “political theater,” arguing that the order does not change existing federal law and will have no bearing on federal courts.

The president’s latest confrontation with Twitter was set off after the tech company placed fact-checking warnings on two of his tweets that claimed, without evidence, that casting ballots by mail allows for voter fraud. Both Democratic and Republican states have used voting by mail for years without reports of widespread fraud.

Trump lashed out at Twitter, comparing the fact-checking labels to censorship and accusing the social media giant of stifling conservative voices, though the president did not provide any examples to back up his assertion.

The president, who often uses Twitter as a megaphone to tout his victories and blast his critics to his more than 80 million followers, said Thursday that if he had the legal authority to do so, he would completely shut down Twitter.

“I think I’d be hurting it very badly if we didn’t use it anymore,” Trump said from the White House. “We have other sites we can use, I guess, or we’d have to develop other sites.”

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey said Wednesday that the platform will continue to warn users about factual distortions on it.

“This does not make us an ‘arbiter of truth,’ ” Dorsey wrote on Twitter. “Our intention is to connect the dots of conflicting statements and show the information in dispute so people can judge for themselves. More transparency from us is critical so folks can clearly see the why behind our actions.”

Dorsey’s comment was an apparent response to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who told Fox News earlier Wednesday that social media companies should stay out of the business of weighing in on what is true or not.

“Private companies probably shouldn’t be, especially these platform companies, shouldn’t be in the position of doing that,” Zuckerberg said.

A Facebook spokesperson added that ending the liability shield for social media companies would make sites responsible for what billions of users around the world say.

“This would penalize companies that choose to allow controversial speech and encourage platforms to censor anything that may offend anyone,” spokesperson Andy Stone said Thursday.

Regulator: Turning the FCC into “the President’s speech police is not the answer”

The White House order takes aim at a 1996 law passed by Congress that has often been at the center of political fights over regulating speech on social media platforms: Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.

The law protects Internet companies from being sued over content that appears on their platforms and allows for content moderation. The removal of a post is left up to the internal rules of companies such as Twitter and Facebook, provided those decisions are made “in good faith.”

Courts have repeatedly upheld the law in favor of technology companies, even when the statute was used to defend websites advertising children who were forced into sex trafficking.

Trump’s order seeks to chip away at that protection by offering a new interpretation of the law. The order argues, in essence, that if the social media companies restrict certain voices on their platforms, the companies should be stripped of their legal immunity, opening the doors to a wave of lawsuits over content seen as defamatory.

Legal experts greeted the order with heavy skepticism, saying, absent a new law passed by Congress, it would not be legally binding.

“It flies in the face of 25 years of judicial precedent, that has been federal precedent in almost every circuit court,” said Kate Klonick, a professor at St. John’s University School of Law in New York. “It’s not the role of the president to interpret federal law.”

The order was “a very, very clear piece of political theater,” Klonick told NPR, adding that the action is “unlikely to have any kind of weight or authority.”

The order directs the Federal Communications Commission to start a rule-making process to clarify when social media companies should keep protections under the law.

Height Capital Markets analysts Chase White and Clayton Allen described the executive order as “mostly noise without any teeth.”

In a note to investors, they wrote that the FCC only exerts limited control over social media companies, which are not regulated like traditional broadcasters. And historically, the FCC has been opposed to social media regulation, White and Allen pointed out.

Already, some of the five members of FCC are expressing concern about the White House’s action.

“This does not work. Social media can be frustrating. But an Executive Order that would turn the Federal Communications Commission into the President’s speech police is not the answer,” Jessica Rosenworcel said in a statement. “It’s time for those in Washington to speak up for the First Amendment. History won’t be kind to silence.”

Attorney General William Barr said the White House plans to push legislation to Congress that would seek to reinterpret Section 230 to counteract the sweeping protections granted to large technology companies.

“It’s been stretched,” said Barr, standing next to Trump in the Oval Office. “And I don’t know of anyone on Capitol Hill who doesn’t agree that it has been stretched beyond its original intention.”

Proponents of Section 230 say both social media platforms and sites like Wikipedia and the Internet Archive would not be able to exist in the same way without the law. If the sites were responsible for everything users posted, the cost of defending against a deluge of lawsuits could prove crippling, advocates of the law argue.

Kate Ruane, senior legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union, called the order an attempt to punish social media companies for posts that displease the president.

“Ironically, Donald Trump is a big beneficiary of Section 230,” Ruane said. “If platforms were not immune under the law, then they would not risk the legal liability that could come with hosting Donald Trump’s lies, defamation and threats.”

GOP’s Hawley: Companies that act like publishers should be treated as ones

Backers of Trump’s order, such as Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., said adding warning labels to the president’s tweets is an editorial decision that shows the social media platform is acting more like a publisher and that the company should lose its special protection.

“It makes little sense to treat companies that publish their editorial comments about others’ content as if they are mere distributors. Companies that act like publishers should be treated like publishers,” Hawley wrote in a letter to Twitter’s Dorsey.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., supports Twitter’s initiative to flag tweets that contain falsehoods. She said Trump’s order directs the federal government to “dismantle efforts to help users distinguish fact from fiction.”

She said the order does not address the proliferation of disinformation on social media, an issue central in the 2016 presidential election and one that’s expected to be influential in November.

“Again and again, social media platforms have sold out the public interest to pad their corporate profits. Their business model is to make money at the expense of the truth,” Pelosi said.

NPR’s Shannon Bond contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/05/28/863932758/stung-by-twitter-trump-signs-executive-order-to-weaken-social-media-companies

The mayor of Minneapolis asked the state National Guard to move in after protests over the death of George Floyd escalated Wednesday night with a fatal shooting, widespread looting, fires and the police deployment of tear gas.

“I cannot risk the safety of innocent people and so that is what I’ve been sworn to uphold and that is what I am dedicated to do,” Mayor Jacob Frey told NBC affiliate KARE. “We can have both things. We can have peaceful demonstrations, but I also have to ensure the safety of everyone in the city.”

The second night of demonstrations near the site of Floyd’s death began peacefully but grew violent as the night went on. Gov. Tim Walz late Wednesday called it an “extremely dangerous situation” and urged residents to leave the area.

Frey pleaded with residents for calm.

“I’m imploring our city, imploring our community, imploring every one of us to keep the peace. Let’s honor George Floyd’s memory,” Frey told KARE11 in a phone interview.

One person was in custody in the shooting death near the site of the protests, police said. Officers responded to a report of a stabbing at 9:05 p.m. and found a man who wasn’t breathing lying on the sidewalk, police said in a statement Thursday morning.

The unidentified victim was rushed to Hennepin County Medical Center. At the hospital, it was discovered the victim had been shot.

Multiple fires were reported, and several businesses were looted. Minneapolis police were assisted by officers from nearby St. Paul, state police and metro transit police.

Beyond the shooting, there were no known injuries to protesters or police, and no additional arrests, Minneapolis police spokesman John Elder said at a news conference early Thursday.

“Tonight was a different night of protesting than it was just the night before,” Elder said.

A reporter for NBC affiliate KARE11 of Minneapolis who was livestreaming the protest reported that an AutoZone and Target had been looted. A Cub Foods and a Dollar Tree also showed signs of damage and looting.

A man poses for photos in front of a fire at an AutoZone in Minneapolis on Wednesday night.Carlos Gonzalez / Star Tribune via AP

Video showed the AutoZone with broken windows and spray paint. One bystander was warning people against damaging the business, saying it had nothing to do with Floyd’s death.

A fire broke out at the AutoZone, a fire department official confirmed Wednesday night.

“Initially … it was just being looted, but at some point, a fire started,” Ricardo Lopez, a journalist for the Minnesota Reformer news organization, told KARE11, adding he wasn’t sure how it began.

Protesters set other fires in the street.

Early Thursday, a reporter from The Minneapolis Star Tribune tweeted images of a housing complex construction site that appeared fully engulfed in flames and video of a liquor store that was trashed with shattered glass and boxes littering the sidewalk.

Elder, the police spokesman, confirmed “a large fire from an apartment building that is under construction” but he did not have a count of how many fires were burning early Thursday.

Police Chief Medaria Arradondo told the local FOX 9 TV station that he ordered the use of tear gas after violence and looting. He said that he is committed to protecting the rights of people to demonstrate and most did so peacefully, but there have been groups committing criminal acts.

Arradondo made a call for peace and patience to let investigations play out Wednesday night.

“Justice historically has never come to fruition through some of the acts that we’re seeing tonight, whether it’s the looting, whether it’s the damage of property and other things,” Arradondo said in the FOX interview.

Protesters also gathered Wednesday evening at the suburban home of the officer seen kneeling on Floyd’s neck as well as the Minneapolis home of Mike Freeman, the Hennepin County prosecutor who would make a charging decision in the case. No violence was reported in those protests.

Hundreds of protesters also gathered in downtown Los Angeles on Wednesday, NBC Los Angeles reported. At times, the demonstrators blocked traffic on the 101 freeway.

Some surrounded two California Highway Patrol vehicles and damaged them.

CHP said when it attempted to disperse a crowd on the freeway, “they were immediately surrounded” and someone broke the rear window of a patrol car with a skateboard.

A CHP officer tried to leave, and a protester jumped on the car’s hood before jumping off into the roadway, officials said. That person is said to have suffered moderate injuries.

A second CHP patrol vehicle stopped to help that man but that vehicle was also surrounded and had its rear window shattered and that officer also left, the CHP said.

Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, died Monday after a white Minneapolis police officer pinned him to the ground and put his knee on his neck for about eight minutes.

His detainment was captured on video, and he can be heard pleading with the officer, “Please, please, please, I can’t breathe.”

The four police officers involved in Floyd’s detainment, which stemmed from a report of a forgery, were fired Tuesday. The officer seen with his knee on Floyd has been identified as Derek Chauvin.

Minneapolis police identified the other officers as Thomas Lane, Tou Thao and J. Alexander Kueng.

Demonstrators help a man who was sitting on a police car and injured by falling onto the ground during a protest to demand justice for George Floyd in downtown Los Angeles on May 27, 2020.Ringo H.W. Chiu / AP

The Minneapolis mayor on Wednesday called for charges to be filed against Chauvin. Police had said Floyd resisted arrest, but Frey said “I saw nothing that would signal that this kind of force was necessary.”

His death is being investigated by the FBI and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.

Video of Floyd’s death has sparked outrage, including from the apparent Democratic presidential nominee, Joe Biden, who tweeted about it on Tuesday and on Wednesday called it a “tragic reminder that this was not an isolated incident, but a part of an ingrained systemic cycle of injustice that still exists in this country.”

President Donald Trump also weighed in on Wednesday. “My heart goes out to George’s family and friends. Justice will be served!” he tweeted.

Bridgett Floyd, Floyd’s sister, said on NBC’s “TODAY” show Wednesday morning that she wants all of the officers at the scene to be charged with murder.

“They murdered my brother. He was crying for help,” she said.

The Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis, which represents the department’s 800-plus rank-and file officers, asked the public not to rush to judgment before all video can be reviewed and a medical examiner’s report released.

On Tuesday, clashes broke out between police and some protesters in Minneapolis, and police deployed tear gas.

“We cannot have members of our community engaging in destructive or criminal types of behavior,” said Arradondo, the Minneapolis police chief.

He said the vast majority of people protesting have been doing so peacefully.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/conflict-erupts-minneapolis-l-protests-over-george-floyd-death-n1216096

On Tuesday, Twitter for the first time added warning tags to two of Trump’s tweets about mail-in ballots, inviting readers to “get the facts” and calling the president’s claims “unsubstantiated.”

Trump tweeted Thursday afternoon: “So ridiculous to see Twitter trying to make the case that Mail-In Ballots are not subject to FRAUD.”

“How stupid, there are examples, & cases, all over the place. Our election process will become badly tainted & a laughingstock all over the World,” Trump’s tweet said.

The president added, “Tell that to your hater,” followed by Roth’s Twitter handle.

Roth has reportedly posted critical messages about Trump and his supporters in the past. “I’m just saying, we fly over those states that voted for a racist tangerine for a reason,” Roth tweeted in November 2016.

The Trump campaign has tweeted about Roth at least twice since Wednesday. And Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., referenced Roth – without using his name – in a letter to Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey criticizing the decision to brand Trump’s tweets with warning labels.

But Twitter told BuzzFeed News that Roth was not responsible for fact-checking Trump’s tweets. “No one person at Twitter is responsible for our policies or enforcement actions, and it’s unfortunate to see individual employees targeted for company decisions,” the spokesperson told Buzzfeed.

Dorsey tweeted Wednesday night that “there is someone ultimately accountable for our actions as a company, and that’s me. Please leave our employees out of this.”

Twitter referred CNBC to Dorsey’s tweet when asked for additional comment on the president’s post.

After Twitter’s fact-check, Trump accused the company of “interfering” in the 2020 presidential election and trying to “CENSOR” him.

“If that happens, we no longer have our freedom. I will never let it happen!” Trump tweeted Wednesday night.

Disclosure: CNBC parent NBCUniversal is a minority investor in BuzzFeed.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/28/trump-attacks-twitter-employee-while-defending-fact-checked-tweets.html

British National (Overseas) passports were issued to Hong Kongers born before the 1997 handover, and under current rules, passport holders can visit the UK for up for six months but cannot work or apply for citizenship. As of December, 300,000 Hong Kongers held a BN(O) passport.

Raab said Britain was now ready to change this rule.

“If China continues down this path and implements this national security legislation we will change that status, and we will remove that six-month limit and allow those BN(O) passport holders to come to the UK and to apply to work and study for extendable periods of 12 months, and that would itself provide a pathway to future citizenship,” Raab told reporters.

“In the meantime we urge China to step back from the brink and live up to its responsibilities as a leading member of the international community,” he added.

Raab’s plan was echoed by Patel, who was understood to have been more supportive in the past of BN(O)-holding Hong Kongers than Raab.

Johnny Patterson, director of the London-based Hong Kong Watch group, said the British government should be prepared to take more action for Hong Kongers.

“If things deteriorate further, the UK will need to consider extending the scheme beyond 12 months, up to and including right of abode, and encourage other international partners to create a lifeboat scheme to ensure all Hong Kongers, including those born after 1997, have a lifeline,” Patterson said.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2020/05/28/uk-to-increase-hong-kong-visa-rights-if-china-pushes-security-law-287644

Four police officers were fired over the death of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man.

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ns7w6EncMk

A health official in California who was a key architect of one of the country’s first lockdowns has cautioned that her state is moving too rapidly to reopen as confirmed cases of the new coronavirus there have surpassed 100,000.

“We believe that our social and economic well-being are best served by a more phased approach that allows activities to resume in a manner that allows people to actually be relatively safe while engaging in the newly open activity,” Dr. Sara Cody, health officer for Santa Clara County—home to Silicon Valley, said during a County Board of Supervisors meeting on Tuesday. The Los Angeles Times first reported Cody’s remarks.

California’s Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, has issued guidance to allow religious services, limited to up to 100 people, to reopen along with other eased restrictions. Cody raised particular concern over the governor’s guidance regarding religious gatherings.

“This announcement to authorize county health officers to allow religious, cultural and political gatherings of 100 people poses a very serious risk of the spread of COVID-19,” she said.

Dr. Mark Ghaly, secretary of the California Health and Human Services Agency, told Newsweek in a statement that the administration has “deep respect” for Cody.

“Our administration has deep respect for the Santa Clara public health officer and all the public health officers across our state. Protecting public health and well-being of all Californians will continue to do drive our administration’s actions, and we fully support local health officers moving at their own pace based on conditions in their communities,” Ghaly said.

A representative from Newsom’s office stressed to Newsweek that Newsom’s guidance allows for a county-by-county approach. Local officials must decide how much or how little they wish to reopen, depending on the situation on the ground. Those wishing to reopen more widely must show that they have the number of COVID-19 cases under control, as well as that they have adequate hospital capacity and enough vital medical supplies.

A Monday press release from California’s Department of Public Health explains that “places of worship can hold religious services and funerals that limit attendance to 25 percent of a building’s capacity—or up to 100 attendees, whichever is lower—upon approval by the county department of public health.”

On Tuesday, the governor addressed concerns that he was allowing for the state to reopen too rapidly.

“I know some people think that’s too much too fast too soon. Others think, frankly, that it didn’t go far enough,” Newsom said. “But suffice it to say, at a statewide level, we now are affording this opportunity again with a deep realization of the fact that people will start to mix…and that is incumbent upon us to practice that physical distancing within these places of worship.”

Dr. Sonia Angell, state public Health officer and director of the California Department of Public Health, has also urged state residents to remain cautious as the state reopens.

“As more of us may be leaving our homes, keeping physical distance, wearing face coverings in public, and washing your hands frequently are more important than ever to help protect yourself and those around you,” Angell said on Monday.

Even as California emerges from lockdown, the number of new confirmed coronavirus cases is on the rise. On Tuesday, the state recorded its highest daily total yet, with a reported 2,908 cases. That’s up from 1,928 on Monday and 2,274 on Tuesday. At the same time, new deaths appear to be declining overall. The state recorded just 51 deaths on Tuesday, less than half of the 110 deaths recorded last Thursday, and about a third of the state’s peak of 153 daily deaths on May 15.

Overall, California has reported 100,022 cases of the new coronavirus. Of those infected, 3,887 have died.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/california-health-officer-warns-state-reopening-too-quickly-coronavirus-cases-top-100000-1506921

Congress has held several hearings on Section 230 and sought input from academics and tech executives. Lawmakers in both parties admonished the Trump administration’s push to include a similar provision in U.S. trade agreements as Congress continues to debate Section 230’s future.

Most critics of Section 230 recognize the importance of maintaining some of its key elements, like moderation protections. Former Vice President Joe Biden revealed himself as a notable exception.

Though few others seem to favor a total repeal, lawmakers have expressed interest in scaling back some of the powers of Section 230 or making platforms earn its protections by complying with certain standards.

“On 230, I know there are some that have said just get rid of it,” Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., told CNBC in an interview in January. Shakowsky had recently hosted a hearing on deepfakes and digital deception in the consumer protection subcommittee, which she chairs.

“Our view is that we want to protect First Amendment rights, there’s no question. But right now, we think the balance favors those who want a liability shield, and [it] goes way too far in that sense.”

It’s still unclear what specific steps lawmakers may take to change Section 230, but they have often used it as a reminder to tech companies that its protections may not last forever.

At the deepfakes hearing, Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., who has advised Congress to revisit Section 230, said, “This hearing should serve as a reminder to all online platforms that we are watching them closely.”

WATCH: Facebook lays out details for content oversight board

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/28/what-is-section-230.html

Peter Manfredonia, the fugitive University of Connecticut student wanted in two killings, was caught in Maryland after a manhunt that stretched on for days, police announced Wednesday night.

Manfredonia was taken into custody at a truck stop in Hagerstown near the Washington County Sheriff’s Office following a six-day, multi-state manhunt involving several law enforcement agencies after he allegedly killed two men and bolted from Connecticut on Sunday.

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The University of Connecticut senior was not injured and no officers were hurt.

The Hagerstown Police Department said an Uber driver dropped off Manfredonia, 23, in the city on Tuesday.

Investigators said the rampage began last Friday when Manfredonia allegedly hacked to death Ted DeMers, 62, with a machete in Willington, Conn.

He then went to another home and allegedly held another man hostage before stealing his guns and truck and speeding to Derby, Conn.

In Derby, Manfredonia is believed to have shot and killed Nicholas Eisele, a former high school classmate, and forced Eisele’s girlfriend into her 2016 Black Volkswagen Jetta before leaving the state. She was found uninjured in Columbia, New Jersey. Police found Eisele shot to death on Sunday.

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Pennsylvania police said Manfredonia took an Uber to a Walmart in East Stroudsburg, not far from the New Jersey border. Police discovered through interviews with the driver and from security camera footage that Manfredonia walked behind the store and onto railroad tracks, investigators said.

Credit: Connecticut State Police

State police also noted that Manfredonia had been seen on surveillance video at a Sheetz in Chambersburg, Pa. A Hyundai Santa Fe reported stolen Monday was recovered near the Sheetz.

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Police later suspected Manfredonia to be in the Hagerstown, Md., area, where a ride-hailing service dropped off someone matching his description Wednesday.

Investigators have not elaborated on a possible motive for the crimes.

Manfredonia is a 2015 graduate of Newtown High School. He is a senior at the University of Connecticut, but has not lived on the campus in Storrs, Conn., at the time of the crimes or during recent semesters, UConn spokesperson Stephanie Reitz told WVIT.

A lawyer for the suspect’s family, Michael Dolan, said Wednesday that Manfredonia, an honors engineering student at UConn, had not shown signs of violence. He said the Newtown native had a history of depression and anxiety, but would not say whether he was on any medication for those conditions.

“This came as a total surprise to everybody based on Peter’s past,” he said. “He’s been a kind-hearted person who has no history of violence or any trouble with the law.”

Fox News’ Marta Dhanis, Danielle Wallace and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.fox5dc.com/news/peter-manfredonia-fugitive-uconn-student-wanted-in-2-killings-caught-in-maryland-after-manhunt

By 10 p.m., an Auto Zone had caught fire. Soon, other fires erupted, including a massive blaze at a construction site. Meanwhile, one person was shot by a pawn shop owner and died at a hospital, police told the Star Tribune, as looters ransacked a Target, Foot Locker and nearby small businesses.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/05/28/minneapolis-protests-george-floyd-death/

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey said he stands by the company’s decision to fact-check two tweets by President Donald Trump, even as it has attracted intense criticism by Trump and his allies.

The statement comes as the White House is preparing an executive order that would target social media companies for alleged bias in their content moderation strategies.

In a series of Tweets late Wednesday, Dorsey addressed the firestorm created by the company’s decision to label Trump’s tweets with a fact-check for the first time. Twitter on Tuesday  added a link under two of Trump’s tweets about mail-in ballots that said, “Get the facts about mail-in ballots.” When clicked, the links directed users to a page that said, in part, “Trump falsely claimed that mail-in ballots would lead to ‘a Rigged Election.’ However, fact-checkers say there is no evidence that mail-in ballots are linked to voter fraud.”

Dorsey on Wednesday stood by his stance that Trump’s tweets “may mislead people into thinking they don’t need to register to get a ballot (only registered voters receive ballots),” but said Twitter would update the link on the tweets “to make this more clear.”

“This does not make us an ‘arbiter of truth,'” Dorsey wrote. “Our intention is to connect the dots of conflicting statements and show the information in dispute so people can judge for themselves. More transparency from us is critical so folks can clearly see the why behind our actions.”

Dorsey’s statement came shortly after the White House said Trump would sign an executive order about social media companies on Thursday. According to a draft of the order obtained by CNBC, Trump would direct the Federal Communications Commission to propose and clarify regulations of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. It would also encourage the Federal Trade Commission to take action against companies engaging in “deceptive” acts of communication. The working draft of the order cites Twitter by name.

The statute targeted in the executive order is commonly criticized by lawmakers across the political spectrum for shielding Big Tech companies from liability for their users’ content. Section 230 was created to allow online platforms to engage in “good Samaritan” moderation of “objectionable” material without being treated like a publisher or speaker. In effect, some conservatives have claimed, it also allows them to get away with removing political views they object to. Social media companies like Twitter and Facebook have vigorously denied such accusations.

Ahead of the White House’s announcement about the executive order, Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., said he would introduce legislation “to end these special government giveaways.” He’s previously introduced a bill that would grant companies the liability protection if they submitted to audits to ensure their algorithms and content-removal practices are “politically neutral.

“If @Twitter wants to editorialize & comment on users’ posts, it should be divested of its special status under federal law (Section 230) & forced to play by same rules as all other publishers,” Hawley wrote in a tweet.

Trump railed against Twitter for its initial decision to label his tweets, saying the company was “interfering in the 2020 Presidential Election.”

“Twitter is completely stifling FREE SPEECH, and I, as President, will not allow it to happen!” Trump wrote in a tweet Tuesday.

On Thursday, he tweeted “This will be a Big Day for Social Media and FAIRNESS!” 

Twitter has been cautious overall with its use of fact-checks on posts by world leaders. It released a policy last June to address the ways it would deal with speech by world leaders, exempting them from certain standards it holds for other users but giving it the ability to take action in the most extreme cases. Twitter has reasoned that most speech by such figures should remain accessible since it is in the public interest, but that action is needed when those statements could cause real-world harm.

Twitter had refused to label a series of Trump’s tweets from earlier this month that included an unfounded accusation that MSNBC host Joe Scarborough should be investigated over the death of his former staffer nearly 20 years ago while he was a congressman. A medical examiner at the time found no evidence of foul play. The coroner concluded that the 28-year-old hit her head in his Florida district office after fainting from an undiagnosed heart condition. Scarborough was in Washington at the time.

In a CNBC interview that aired Thursday, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said he does not think social networks should be fact-checking what politicians post.

  “Political speech is one of the most sensitive parts in a democracy, and people should be able to see what politicians say,” he told “Squawk Box” co-host Andrew Ross Sorkin.

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WATCH: Here’s how Big Tech companies are combating coronavirus misinformation

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/28/twitter-ceo-stands-by-fact-check-on-trumps-tweets.html