One of the leading rabbis of the non-hassidic haredi world, Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, 92, has been diagnosed with coronavirus.
“I don’t speak because I have the power to speak; I speak because I don’t have the power to remain silent.” Rav Kook z"l
One of the leading rabbis of the non-hassidic haredi world, Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, 92, has been diagnosed with coronavirus.
Coronavirus antibodies in blood plasma donations fade rapidly after symptoms first appear, a new study suggests.
Researchers followed a small group of recovered COVID-19 patients who donated their blood and found all of them showed decreases in antibodies after three months.
What's more, just three weeks later, levels for half of the detectable antibodies fell again.
Coronavirus antibodies in blood plasma donations fade rapidly after symptoms first appear, a new study suggests.
Researchers followed a small group of recovered COVID-19 patients who donated their blood and found all of them showed decreases in antibodies after three months.
What's more, just three weeks later, levels for half of the detectable antibodies fell again.
Convalescent plasma therapy is when the liquid portion of blood is taken from a recovered coronavirus patient.
The hope is that the antibodies and immunity in the blood of a healthy person will be transferred to a sick person.
From this, the infected person will then develop the antibodies needed to fight off the coronavirus.
Totally biased Chris Wallace pulled the same nonsense in a 2016 debate. After Donald Trump had just denounced these groups dozens of times in the previous weeks, Chris Wallace tried to con the audience by asking why he hasn't denounced them:

A government report released ahead of the start of Sukkot on Friday evening warned that the ritual huts in which many Jews celebrate the holiday were a “grave danger” for spreading the coronavirus.
The latest Health Ministry figures meanwhile showed 7,639 new infections were confirmed Thursday, a day after a record 9,021 new cases were confirmed.
Another 671 were recorded since midnight, with the number of COVID-19 cases since the pandemic began rising to 255,771.
No new deaths were recorded overnight, with the national toll remaining at 1,622.
According to the ministry, there were 70,660 active cases, with 807 people in serious condition, including 196 on ventilators. Another 268 were in moderate condition and the rest had mild or no symptoms.
The Health Ministry said that 62,248 tests were performed Thursday, 12.3 percent of which came back positive, below the 13-15% daily positive test rates recorded over the past week.
A Gallup poll shows that most Americans believe incumbent President Donald Trump will win the Nov. 3 election against former Vice President Joe Biden, and the percentage of respondents who are satisfied with his performance as president stands at 46 percent - the highest number since May.
Earlier this year, before the coronavirus pandemic struck the US, the percentage of Americans who expressed satisfaction with Trump's performance stood at a record high since taking office, with 49 percent approving of his performance.
Trump's approval rating fell to between 38-42 percent following the coronavirus outnreak and months of racial tensions in the US.
The poll also shows that most Americans expressed satisfaction with the way Trump handled the appointment of Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg's successor to the Supreme Court. Among Republican voters, the satisfaction rate with Trump stands at 94 percent, while among Democratic voters only 7 percent expressed support for his performance. 39 percent of Independents approve of Trump's performance.
Trump received the highest marks for his handling of the economy with a 54 percent approval rate. 48 percent approve of his handling of law and order matters in light of the riots which have occurred in many American cities in recent months. His approval rating on foreign affairs stands at 46 percent, relations with China at 46 percent, response to the coronavirus at 44 percent, and race relations at 38 percent.
56 percent of respondents said that they believe Trump will win the upcoming presidential election next month. 90 percent of Republicans think Trump will win, while just 73 percent of Democrats believe Joe Biden will win.
The poll was conducted prior to the first presidential debate between Trump and Joe Biden on Tuesday.
Who was the best boy?
A heartfelt obituary written by a South Carolina woman about her golden retriever’s adorable “little quirks” fetched tens of thousands of likes when it went viral on Twitter Thursday.
Sallie Gregory Hammett, 30, wrote the tribute to her dog, Charlie, who died this month at age 7 after a battle with lymphoma — describing him as a peanut butter-and-banana-chowing, boyfriend-material-testing, fiercely loyal force of “unconditional love.”
“If we’re being honest, Charlie loved everything life had to offer,” reads the obituary, which has since raked in 100,000 likes. “He was good at a lot of things, but he was best at unconditional love. He taught everyone he met about loving people and always seeing the good in everyone.”
Hammett took Charlie home as an 8-week-old puppy and the two quickly became inseparable.
When she met her now-husband, David, Charlie’s affectionate response to him was an early deciding factor that he was a good guy, and worth dating.
“[David] loved him as much as I did, which I didn’t think was possible,” Hammett told CNN, adding that the couple adored the pup’s eccentricities.
“When you put the peanut butter on the banana, I mean you would think it was just the best day of his life,” she said.
And it cracked them up that he was oddly stubborn about refusing to use stairs.
“We never could figure out why, but he just needed a lot of encouragement to go upstairs,” she said.
When Charlie went to the big doghouse in the sky on Sept. 13, Hammett spent days mourning before considering taking out an ad in a local paper.
Instead, Hammett, who has a background in design, created a mockup newspaper-style obituary and posted it on Twitter, calling him “The best boy.”
After it was reposted by the popular accounts WeRateDogs and Thoughts of Dog, it reached thousands of sympathetic pooch lovers.
“His last days were so happy and will be cherished forever,” Hammett wrote. “In lieu of flowers, the family asks that you give all your pups some extra love in honor of Charlie.”
President Trump announced early Friday that he and First Lady Melania Trump have tested positive for the coronavirus.
“Tonight, @FLOTUS and I tested positive for COVID-19. We will begin our quarantine and recovery process immediately. We will get through this TOGETHER!,” the president tweeted.
The first lady said the two “are feeling good,” in her own tweet addressing the diagnosis.
“Please be sure you are staying safe & we will all get through this together,” she wrote.
A memorandum dated Thursday from the president’s physician said the president and first lady “plan to remain at home within the White House during their convalescence.”
The memo added: “Rest assured I expect the President to continue carrying out his duties without disruption while recovering,”
Hours before Trump announced his positive COVID-19 results, news broke that one of his top aides, Hope Hicks, was diagnosed with the illness earlier Thursday.
Hicks had traveled aboard Air Force One with the Trumps to Tuesday’s presidential debate in Cleveland. She also accompanied Trump to his Wednesday night rally in Minnesota.
Trump did a Fox News phone interview Thursday night where he acknowledged spending “a lot of time” with Hicks and said he was awaiting the results of his test.
Trump also explained to host Sean Hannity that he and his staff run into issues with social distancing because Americans are often approaching them to express thanks.
“When soldiers and law enforcement comes up to her, you know, she wants to treat them great,” Trump said about Hicks. “Not say, ‘Stay away, I can’t get near you.’ It’s a very, very tough disease.”
With Israel currently topping the world record for the rate of new daily cases of COVID-19 infection, some doctors are reaching an uncomfortable conclusion: that the actions of one community are disproportionately responsible for the surge.
“I’m afraid to draw this conclusion,” says Dror Mevorach, after a day on the COVID-19 wards at Jerusalem’s Hadassah Medical Center. “I’m not sure people will get it right, and they’ll see anti-Semitism and think I’m chasing the Orthodox, and I don’t want that at all.”
But he says he’s unable to ignore the scene in his wards, with numerous patients hospitalized soon after attending large indoor prayer services over Rosh Hashanah. “I expect, in a few days, to get a similar wave from Yom Kippur,” he commented.
Mevorach, Hadassah’s head of internal medicine, delivered his conclusion reluctantly, and stressed that living conditions, as well as conduct, have played a part in high infection levels of Haredim, or ultra-Orthodox Jews. Still, “I do think that, in some sections, irresponsible behavior no doubt encouraged the spread of disease, among themselves and in Israel,” he said.
He spoke to The Times of Israel as the scale of the Jewish state’s coronavirus woes in a global context was becoming clearer than ever, and as Israeli health officials gave the nation hard statistics on just how much more common coronavirus is among Haredim than among other citizens.