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Does your question has more on the speed of the trials in the us . The fact that the 3rd stage Clinical Trials are wrapped up so quickly here for pfizer is because the participants had more exposure to cohabit than initially the timeline had anticipated. That is because of how big of a peak the u. S. Is experiencing at this moment with 11400000 people having already been infected. Now the way that this study was conducted is that they took 44000, people split them in 2 groups, half of them got the vaccine, the other had did not among the group that did not get the vaccine. Well, there were 162 cases of cove. It 3 people have been killed in protests in uganda after a president ial opposition candidate was arrested. The pop star turned politician known as bobby wine says he was violently dragged out of his car by police. Officials say his campaigning has broken coronavirus restrictions. The rest is centered mainly on kampala. Both sides are claiming the upper hand as the conflict in ethiopias take. Religion continues. From minister, ahmed says his troops are marching on the regional capital ahead of a swift victory. Rival to great Peoples Liberation front, says its holding up the offensive and has made the region hell for government troops. Boeings 737 max alanah has been given permission to fly again by u. S. Regulators. 2 years after 2 deadly crashes. The jets will need software, upgrades and pilots will need training before any passengers are carried to crashes in indonesia and ethiopia, kill nearly 350 people up next is 4 times to stay with us. One day i might be covering politics or do i mean next time i hear of microtargeting from serbia, the hungry or whats most important to me is talking to people understanding what they are going through. So that i can be the headlines in the most human way possible. We believe everyone has a story worth hearing. Its been a lot of deftness. A lot of i was at the cemetery 4 times in a week call. Its been a nightmare for rob. Lets pray, god, we thank you for your goodness and your mercy, and love and care when kopek 19 began spreading across the u. S. And taking lives with it was clear that while the virus didnt see color race, it quickly found the divisions that society had already created people so close to you. Now you see im not a bell and gone, gone across the country. Black and latino communities have been disproportionately impacted by the virus. And in chicago, one of the most racially segregated cities in the us. The majority of deaths have been in black and latino neighborhoods. The sort of recipe for impact existed at bay, so that when a disease like overhead land and a falls right onto the map of inequality that exist already. The disparity that cooper tonight on is one that r. T. Existed in everything from housing to health care to access to food. All covert did was plant itself into the social fogs that preexisted, the pandemic, was a way of making visible to a lot of americans and people around the world. What had been invisible to that . The shame on that right for not seen, because weve known this for many, many years that weve chosen to look away the covert pandemic is a work of americas true. These inequities that this country has refused to address, has been consistently neglected in this episode of fault lines. We look at chicagos great divide that allowed covert to spread by its the inspired before we expire. Dont just exist layer will seemingly and lives it took in the process. She was amazing. She was beautiful. She was the most incredible soul. So know her is to love her. She was so this she was a she its, i enjoy and have been a some days it feels like someone snatched the sun from the sky. You never think that your babies will leave you. Its not supposed to be to this. Oh, its weird. When we met nicky, it had been 5 months since her 22 year old daughter nylon had passed away from covert 19. This was my love was my 6 child. She was everybodys favorite. She was the party planner. She was the family d. J. She made up old again. You see this love music, she does love life. He has her face, her personality. I love him to tell me then what happened this spring . It was out of nowhere. The only thing she was battling with was the asthma. Having trouble breathing, she didnt want to go to the hospital because of cold feet. So she couldnt take it anymore, so she called it ambulance and they immediately set up an oxygen. And she went to the hospital nearby. At this point, you were not thinking that she had over it, you know that it, she waited for a lot of test results to come back. And then she takes me to say, mom, they say i have hope. And my heart beslan us there was sending you to a better hospital. When i now arrived, nicky says her daughter was placed on a ventilator, and that after nationally seeming stable, her condition got worse. She was on a ventilator for 23 days in the 23rd. Well she was only 20 9 and left behind her 2 year old son eric. When she was in a hospital fighting for her life, she was saying, wheres mommy . Every day. Wheres mommy . Wheres mommy . And what its like he said on my lap and he put his there are much us and he said, mommy, we had her cremated and i have for you. Ok, sleepy. Every day you turn and you hear somebody else say its somebody else says it was like, you think youre living in a movie. But the pandemic hasnt been a nightmare for every community in chicago because its playing out along racial lines. As coppa deaths began to rise in the spring, nearly 70 percent of fatalities were black residents, even though theyre only 30 percent of the citys population. And as its continued, its been both the citys black and latino communities that have had the highest infection and death rates. By the end of october, over 3000. 00, people had died in chicago. Black residents were 42 percent of the citys deaths, and latinos were 33 percent. Is that all too familiar story of sort of impact the happens to communities of color, right . When the data began to show who was being impacted most the city formed a task force to address the disproportionate impact of the virus on communities of color. Some of the biggest things that impact and impacted death rates was it was underlie Health Conditions and lack of access to health care. Those things are deeply racial as blacks and latinos are also more likely to be essential workers and exposed to the virus. It is the sort of devastating toll of what it means to continue to live in a very Racialized Society and really see so many of the negative impacts us society continue to fall and people of color. Good morning everybody will welcome everyone of you all today. We are grateful to god for the privilege of being present on this morning to see who we got over here these last year in just a lobby group. It is in that hour where welcome. Weve been Alive Services all in facebook. And to now its been a little lonely because we were not allowing anybody to call up to him and about a month ago. In a predominantly black neighborhood where reverend Marshall Hatch lives. The community is still coming to terms with the loss. The pandemic is inflicted. On the reverend himself lost his older sister rhoda to cope with one time his role at leslie birthday party. My mom died when i was 8. Wrote, it was like a surrogate mom. And big sister she was the one that i would actually call just talk to just as the reverend was transitioning to Online Services in the spring, and the country was shutting down route and got sick, was very rapid. We dropped off and she was talking walk into a wheelchair a week later, when theyre standing over a good little too heavily sedated body of a dog. I just him stay there long and the same could buy me 3 days before routed died, Richard Hatch also lost his best friend of 45 years to covet. Larry arabs because of them going to church, but he went to high school then we went to college. Did on the go ahead. He was the best man at my wedding. The losses contained a, you know, my mexico, im able to live side by side 20 years. What has been the impact in this community and black, chicago, as you say, of the people already in various states of desperation and stress . You know, so it is really just another layer of stress. I mean, what do you think is behind that . I think its become entirely clear that there is such a thing as structural racism, destitution all races, segregation from resource, an opportunity where people just various states of survival. The pressure of racism. I mean, is a very real phenomenon. Going to get that in chicago. One thing behind the pandemics, racialized impact is the city segregation. Oh, the reverend lives on the west side and 9 lives on the south side of the citys predominantly black communities that have been most impacted by cove it. Meanwhile, the fewest cases have been in the predominately white and wealthy neighborhoods near downtown. This Health Disparity seen in kuwait isnt new though. Before the pandemic, the Life Expectancy gap between these neighborhoods was as wide as 17 years. Weve created a society in the us, nothing new that has put hop and brown and black on the bottom, the rich on top and the poor on the bottom. And we overlap those categories and the, services that we provide, whether b. , school, housing, health care have all been, or layered in the exact same way that kaos of facts in the body. First world and 3rd world conditions and in the subsidy for have traced to ups this the west gulf will pour. Lets go as one of the lowest life, especially the cities in the city of west, has one of the Lowest Per Capita income. Its one of the younger communities as well. If youre a 16 year old teenager or young man who lives in garfield are likely africanamerican has a little more than a 5050 chance of living to the age of 65 peoples minds go to violence and gun violence. And certainly gun violence is a problem, but actually more than 50 percent of the early deaths in that neighborhood have caused by heart disease, diabetes, stroke, hypertension, cancer, product illnesses, not just peoples beliefs, behaviors and biology that determine who live in the united states. But the social instructional conditions under which people live, living under social conditions where the neighbors arent safe for those not food around where youre housing a spore ultimately has biological. A facts. One of the reasons behind the Life Expectancy gap is a lack of resources. Something thats become more acute for vulnerable communities during the pandemic. The best way for us not to die from cold. That is not to get it sold. Well, people dont want to shelter in place, they need resources high. So we provide fresh fruits and vegetables as well. As household supplies, we are truly in the middle of a quality of life, right . Were going to help you even before the Pandemic Community groups around chicago. Were working to address and draw awareness to the inequalities that have become more urgent now. Like access to healthy food, most americans dont worry about if they have a school. Right. Weve heard the term. Right . Like the grocery store, say, thats also that in itself is a health crisis. Right . Right. To health inequities, kovan exposed can be tied to problems like food deserts, as well as pollution and housing, all of which follow along lines of inequality on a map of chicago, chicago like deeply. Federighi. Johnson is an artist who lives on the south side of chicago. She examines the impact of the citys historic segregation. This is a map that was shared in the media for this time period. There are civil case. This is a chicago segregation what it looks like, the blue that you see, those are the neighborhoods that are predominantly black, the pink purple ish that you see. Those are the neighborhoods that are predominantly white. And you see overlaps in all of these different yes. Mean projects folded, map looks at the differences between neighborhoods in the cities, north and south sides of the same street, 15 miles apart. One of the starkest differences between the north side and the south side resources in development. The development of new homes, new business, the those are the most dramatic differences that ultimately will be other amenities that are also different. Whats behind the difference, a, chicagos historic segregation and discriminatory housing practice that were really reveling in the 195060 beginning in 1910, millions of africanamericans left the south and its racist jim crow laws for industrial cities in the north like chicago. Its you know, where my grandmother decided to come down south and see better opportunities. And when they arrived from the south, they were illegally blocked from living in certain neighborhoods and denied federally backed loans for homes in the areas they did live. Many could only buy homes and inflated prices through predatory contracts, resulting in the fact of their wealth and equity. Unfortunately, greater inglewood is a neighborhood that was acutely impacted by discriminatory lending practices. Yes, this is a great example of what theres a lot of thought into a block of tea houses. Yeah, these are nice structure. Oh yeah. Because if you literally picked them up and put them on the north side, it would be, you know, 405000, what is it worth now . Maybe 20000, housing discrimination and segregation the began decades ago, laid the ground for the desertion of resources from black communities. Thank you. 68, there was an influx of African American families which came up from the south in the last wave of the great migration and began moving in and which then entire and created what know of the white light. Lotta households left there with further west out suburbs, and there was a lot of large cheering didnt definite that began at that time. He shot as part of a coalition working to address the Life Expectancy gap in chicago, especially by targeting a central problem disinvestment desertion of businesses and jobs. So what type of jobs are available to these Community Members that have the highest disparity that will in turn determine what kind of Health Insurance they have access to . What is the career trajectory thats allowing people to not only make a livable wage, but a sustainable wage over a period of time to break generational poverty . How does disinvestment affect the Health Outcomes in this community . Theres a connective tissue there that you cannot separate. You have to look at what investment in the community is, what is the strength of the court or what type of businesses exist . What type of Grocery Stores . What is the quality of food . When we look at the Life Expectancy gap, theyre all connected. The disinvestment began decades ago and still have to mean and communities are still fighting to keep the few resources in their neighborhoods to hospitals. Because the geographic segregation that gets replicated. And because the way capitalism works, theres a disincentive to go into poor black neighborhoods that many of the hospitals that serve the citys low income, black and latino communities, are safety net hospitals, medical centers that serve the poor. Theyre largely painted a Government Program medicaid, because black people are more likely to live in concentrated poverty and lack next people as well. In the latter, next population has a lot of undocumented uninsured people and the institutions they go to are force take a vow of poverty in order to know ive worked at that, those hospitals that are there and serve or people are undercapitalized, they cant invest. So as a doctor, i call that experience one street to a world right down the street. And we close in 2009, which was hard because we had a lot of resources that we needed because they rely on medicaid payments. Its difficult for these hospitals to stay afloat financially. In the past 20 years, 8 hospitals that serve low income communities in chicago have closed, and this is mercy, hospital. Mercy hospital is facing the same fate. Now, closure in the midst of a pandemic. Mercy hospital is one of the oldest hospitals in the city of chicago, and this is also considered a safety net hospital. Absolutely. But if you look at the people coming out of the hospital, you see who constituency is working. Class black and brown because its funded through medicaid reimbursements, does not have the resources that this hospital used to have a try the center. Close it. Whats the impact on the community . Then if deans safety net hospitals close, the impact is that people that live in this community dont have access to health put health care within a safe distance that hole. So people end up catching a bus in a train to try to get health care. Its a Public Safety risk, ill believe it. When destitution is like this shut down, it contributes to people leaving the area, the closure of Mercy Hospital in line with the disinvestment that youve seen. Absolutely it to me. It is a part of the look to your left. All this lead out used to be the out of the will housing project. I dont use the word gentle the case because i think that takes the sting out of it. But with the way you program the way you produce communities as you kill the basic quality of life is too early. Can it now . So right now, Chicago Health Equity Coalition has an action, a 4 oclock, were going to, were going to save Mercy Hospital, whatever it takes you to yes, maggie to screw, as well as a coalition of the unions want the governor of illinois to intervene, to save the hospital were in this to the 1st hospital but we let our help now to manage our health. 7 that a closing Mercy Hospital and downsizing them out of access to health care in black communities. This fortunately effected my copay. 90 and other Health Disparities created by White Supremacy is a farce to the berry. I trust that governor great skill sets means the export, big need to cover the costs that float the stuff, this cold air of a house that you know about to help out so nicely now, but its going to be somebody else. And then when we come downtown to the citys financial center, hoping to raise awareness in the area they say politicians care about going to be in a box called what is prepped. It says they cant ignore them. We will say what were doing. Were going to Mercy Hospital would serve a largely black population. It gets hit by over. Were now the prices are rising. Its 6 am because its black people. Nobody cares. Thats part of the problem. Making people care about something that simply imbedded in society is racism. Its you let me answer you, i think having to try to make it very imposing a hospital, especially as the virus continues to spread across the us. And communities of color are still a risk. It is safe. Get out of there. Make him a week from now, house and neck with days in this country. We promote death gas, actual structural violence. Why . Closing a safety net hospital in an area of the city that desperately needs one. And i cruise accountable. Thats the interesting thing about structural racism. You dont have to find an accountable individual. Its about our system called it is the great new field has revealed. The savage inequities in almost every basic quality of life is teaching you to think about. The pandemic has revealed while we have the preexisting conditions that we dont have access to Quality Health care. That many of our young people in schools dont have access to technology. Things that most americans take for granted. We are not the thieves that we are not the problem. White supremacy is the east on the question is will america operate like that in your name . In under a year, coverage 19 has altered our societies and exposed deficiencies in political, social, and economic structure of capitalism. Is the pandemic that is the root cause of so much of this suffering apps and big data, which old could literally save our lives to live. The good life has the pandemic given us the chance to reevaluate our world. All hail the lockdown coming soon on aljazeera. For 23 years, mohsin has collected objects he finds along the coast. Enough to fill his museum enough to break a Guinness World record. With a story for every object, hes become an environmental activist and inspired artist and a voice for the plight of countless markets. Much music such as aljazeera a mad no move out of his parents house after he got married. He says he found more space to begin discussing after a run of eating it last year. Its now his home, along with his wife to turkey and helped put the Israeli Government said to keep was to be constructed to be prompt and permits and issued as a militia order. Last month, our interview were cut short. As he hears that the israeli army has arrived in the village with the bulldozer, residents say, soldiers gave them one minute to get home. It took the found me months to build their brick house and just an hour to see it get demolished. 95 percent effective Drug Company Pfizer to seek a merge and see approval for his coated 19 vaccine. As the u. S. Death, toll tops 250000 problem. Regardless, odds are a live from doha also coming up deadly clashes in uganda. Off the opposition politician bobby warren is arrested while campaigning for the upcoming president ial election. Breaking with tradition, mike is set to become the 1st top u. S. Diplomats

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