The following comment inspired the blogmaster to expand the focus on data collection and discussion about the COVID 19 pandemic. Thanks to @Lyall@Amit

Blogmaster


David; re. your 4:41 am post;

You are correct but I have indeed considered that cohort of the population.

The reason that the US experts are beating the drum for testing, testing and more testing is to get a handle on what proportion of the general public has been compromised by the virus in any way and has left its signatures in body fluids including blood in the population. The virus is shed from the infected body as the disease is brought under control. When it is controlled it has been found that it takes around 7 days for all particles to be shed from the body. Infected persons are released back into the community when they test negative twice over a period of 2 days.

Barbados, like all of our island neighbours, did or does not have access to large numbers of tests and had to use what we had very sparingly. Thus, the only measure that we had for gauging the incidence of the virus in the population (and a very imperfect one, at that) might be by comparing the evidence of infection levels hinted at by a comparison of the graphs of the progress of the various Covid-19 outbreaks in our Islands.

Most of the world was in the same position as the Caribbean and used the data obtained by the minimal testing of infected people and their contacts and their contacts to produce the graphs we see on such sites as WHO and Worldometer etc. All these graphs give an imperfect picture and significant underestimation of infection levels in the county or country in which the tests are carried out, but, since they are carried out in the same way in each country they might provide some rationale for guesstimating the comparative levels of the infection in various groups of countries.

The data shows that, starting out at essentially the same levels, there was some divergence in relation to the rate of infection and therefore progress of the various outbreaks in various countries. The graphs for Barbados showed low and declining levels of infection from the beginning, peaking at the level of 13 positive cases per day and thereafter showing a slowly declining trend. The individuals who would have contributed to the declining trend would have been primarily from the contact testing but should also have included other individuals referred by Health professionals or who presented themselves to Government institutions because of concern that their symptoms might point to untimely death due to the dread Covid-19.

Amit, in an earlier post on this blog, reported on his initiative of graphing Covid-19 incidence over weekly periods throughout the epidemic, in several Caribbean Islands. If David thinks it is appropriate and Amit agrees I can post a subset of graphs clipped from his data for 6 Caribbean territories which I think could illustrate some of what I have presented above.


Covid 19

There was 1 more positive case announced today as well as 1 death. A slight uptick of the daily cases line is indicated in the graph by the blue line. The total cumulative number of positive cases from the tests carried out yesterday is 76 – Llyall Small

COVID 19

Attached is the updated C-19 graph for 2020-04-23. There were no additional positive cases from yesterday’s tests and therefore cumulative positive cases remain at 76 – Lyall Small

covid10

covid12

Two new positive cases were identified from yesterday’s tests. There are now 5 cases of contacts with a previously identified individual. The 5 cases are workers from a Government Institution. Tests are ongoing today (25 April 2020)Lyall Small

Covid11

Updated graph for 26 April 2020. No new +ve cases were found. Cumulative count is still 79 – Lyall Small

covid13

There was one additional +ve case identified today (27 April 2020) from the last tranche of NAB workers moving the cumulative total cases to 80. The graph is still essentially trending downwards – Lyallsmall

Covid-Cumulative 1
Graphing Covid-19 incidence in several Caribbean Islands – Source data: caribbeansignal.com

3,454 responses to “COVID 19 UPDATES”

  1. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    lol…ah ha….optics.
    You are likely correct. I don’t think that way naturally, so I often need reminding.


  2. Another address from the president? Is it about CoVid? Where is Dt Walcott and his CoVid team?


  3. The news numbers are trending down
    Borders remain open for visitors
    Vaccine for health care workers and govt workers policeman and all essential workers
    Wear your mask
    Back to ABc planning
    The one thing she said and what she must be challenged by media is her stating that a person cannot become infected if they come in contact with a asymptomatic person
    That is not entirely true
    I know of person who the opposite has occured from what the PM stated


  4. Dr Corey Forde, Barbados’ lone infectious diseases specialist, will be the first person to receive a coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine if Government is able to secure at least four by this weekend.
    Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley said during an address to the nation a short while ago that Government is in deep discussion to try to secure a “handful” of vaccines in the first instance.
    The others who would receive the vaccine are Medical Officer of Health – Ports of Entry, Dr Manohar Singh, who has been “the main person doing the testing and even going on cruise ships and boats and climbing”; and Minister of Health and Wellness Jeffrey Bostic, according to Mottley.
    Mottley said she would receive the fourth vaccine if necessary.
    The Prime Minister said Government will have word on the four vaccines in a few hours.
    She said Government also hopes to have other vaccines available within the next four to eight weeks. ….(Quote)

    What a revelation. One for the president.

  5. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    Don’t agree with the reintroduction of the alphabet system, think it will cause more crowding and lines. They only need to continue limiting the numbers in the building which I don’t think ever stopped and keep normal opening hours.


  6. Is there any policy that will get 100% support especially from the armchair critics?

  7. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @Hal Austin January 8, 2021 5:46 PM
    Good for them being the vaccine guinea pigs. They better hope they don’t have any serious adverse effects or nobody will be taking it.


  8. I am temporarily out of the COVOD-19 discussion.
    If I wait long enough the GOB will regain the upper hand; of that I am certain.
    Hopefully, at that time, the protocols will be more rigidly enforced.

    Don’t forget to wear your mask, social distance and wash your hands.

    BDS $ 6,000 is equivalent to JAM $426,102.46 (almost half of a million)
    JAM $ 6,000 is equivalent to BDS $84
    If sentencing is influenced by a person’s ability to pay, then it stands to reason that the magistrate thought the Jamaican was able to pay the $6000.00 BDS dollars. Perhaps the magistrate was talking Bajan and the other was talking Jamaican (dollars).

    It appears that whatever formula the magistrate is using needs revising.


  9. “Good for them being the vaccine guinea pigs.”
    Are they being guinea pigs? Isn’t the vaccine being used successfully in other places?
    Do the words “essential workers” come to mind?

  10. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    Maybe if they had taken the time to listen more to the armchair critics instead of assuming they more qualified and non-qualified people could not contribute, we would not be where we are today.

    One category missing from that Level 1 group for <24hour testing is any secondary or tertiary contact with symptoms.

    They are now starting to realize they have to throw their coveted rulebooks out; stop the PR and blame game; identify the problem, look at where they want to be and figure out how to get there with the least wastage of time, money and people resources. All things that require critical thinking, a level of flexibility and cutting red tape which governments fail at.

    It does not look like they had proper disaster scenarios and appropriate responses worked out. It took too long for them to catch up and get ahead of this thing. The bus crawl may have been the blessing in disguise to spur them into action.

  11. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @TheOGazerts January 8, 2021 6:20 PM

    Better them than me. Let who is pushing the vaccine be at the forefront. No long term effects testing and you will come and tell me it safe to take.

    Can I sue them if I take it and something bad happen to me in the next year or two is what i want to know?

  12. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    What we really have to do to truly get in front of this thing is to start looking at all the early treatment studies out there repurposing the cheap drugs to treat this thing before people get sick.

    We have that ability to easily catch people before they deteriorate.


  13. Four vaccines
    I thought these shipments came out in special required batches to keep updated correct stastical amounts for batches delivered to each country
    Amm not buying that four count talk
    Mia had to say something positive to calm the people nerves
    Amm four vaccines delivered to barbados
    Well that is more than punching against its weight
    Meanwhile countries like Jamaics still waiting
    Don’t think what Mia said is true because the portocols for vaccination is not set by WHO and PAHO alone but drawn up by scientist and other medical organisations worldwide
    Not only would barbados be setting an unheard precedent but one which other countries can demand
    But then again Mia lives in a world set aside and apart from reality
    Evident of how govt handling of the virus has been allowed to spread absent of being not prepared for the spike


  14. TORONTO — The Ontario government has extended all COVID-19 emergency orders until Jan. 20.

    The premier said new modelling coming early next week will paint a potentially dire scenario in the province.

    “We’re in a desperate situation, and when you see the modelling, you’ll fall out of your chair,” Ford said.


  15. If Barbados continues to allow tourist to visit it seems to me more doctors and nurses will be needed to treat patients as Covid 19 spreads.


  16. Hospital resources ‘stretched’ to provide care
    The recent outbreak of COVID-19 is taking a toll on the Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH).
    Management is reporting that while the hospital is not directly treating COVID-19 patients, its human and financial resources are severely stretched in the provision of extended care for the rising number of cases.
    This was revealed by Acting Director of Medical Services Dr Clyde Cave during a virtual press conference on Thursday.
    He explained that from a clinical standpoint the increased infections had been quite challenging, adding that staff already had their hands full with non-COVID-19-related matters. He said while the QEH had seasonal spikes in occupancy, the current numbers were uncharacteristic of the time period and he attributed this to self-neglect of people with pre-existing conditions during the lockdown last March.
    “I think you would realise that this does not come cheap and I think that you also would realise that even before this increase we were in a period of financial constraints trying to improve our efficiency. The hospital has been full recently even though there has been a seasonal variation; we have been even more occupied than usual. We attribute that to some of the change and even
    neglect that happened when we had the initial lockdown. A lot of the elderly and most vulnerable really took the advice to stay home to heart and this was to their detriment. We are now seeing the fallout from that,” said Cave.
    He pointed out that expert personnel of the QEH were running the various isolation facilities and the recent outbreak of COVID-19 at Her Majesty’s Prisons Dodds had put a greater strain on those limited resources as well as the hospital’s budget.
    “The hospital is pretty maxed out. You can imagine that now having to ramp up to prepare for COVID-19, even though treatment is not at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. Our expertise is what has been supporting Harrison Point, Blackman and Gollop and we have now been called upon to assist in the prison,” he said.
    “Going forward, wherever the need is, we will equally be required to respond. This is a small medical community; there is not a lot of reserve physicians with the appropriate training that we can bring in at this stage. One can appreciate also that the service staff, doctors, nurses, would require an increase in budget,” Cave said.
    (CLM)

    Source: Nation


  17. Breaching of rules ‘adds to problem’
    The continued breaching of COVID-19 protocols by visitors is proving to be one of the major obstacles in the fight to get to the bottom of the current spike of positive cases in Barbados.
    Acting Chief Medical Officer Dr Kenneth George said yesterday that investigations in the last few days had revealed that the breaches of quarantine had forced the Ministry of Health to find more resources to look into the four clusters of cases currently active on the island.
    George and senior medical officer Dr Arthur Phillips were guests on Starcom Network’s Down To Brass Tacks radio call-in programme along with noted virologist Dr Brendan Larder.
    George also suggested that the way Barbadians acted socially in December, letting their guard down by partying and not keeping up with protocols, also worsened the situation.
    Phillips said that even as they continued to map out the cases and contact tracing continued, they were yet to find any patient zero for each of those four clusters. He added, however, that based on the current mapping of primary contacts, they remained “optimistic” about finding the linkages to the clusters.
    The largest cluster, originating from a bus crawl on Boxing Day and attended by numerous staff members of Her Majesty’s Prisons Dodds, has led to more than 120 inmates and numerous warders testing positive for COVID-19.
    Public health authorities are also actively investigating three other clusters, two on the West Coast and two other cases which have not yet produced positive cases. George, commenting on pushback regarding the country’s protocols, said the guidelines from the Pan American Health Organisation and the World Health Organisation continued to guide the way Barbados dealt with the current clusters. “The protocols have worked for us for a long period. They have
    been modified when science became available. It was only when we had issues in late December that we were put under pressure. The protocols have worked for Barbados for a long time. But internal mixing and persons starting to disobey the laws have led to . . . this situation. There have been breakdowns with regard to how the public moved around in December, with all the parties taking place,” he noted.
    “Several issues around
    Christmas time brought us to this situation. The ministry has to face this head-on.”
    George reminded Barbadians that last year health officials dealt with the COVID-19 outbreak at a school, which was contained in ten days; a cluster at the National Assistance Board in seven days; and a cluster in a church, which was also quickly contained.
    More complex
    “But this challenge is a bit more complex. There are several moving parts,” he admitted. “If there is expertise anyone wants to offer, that would be highly appropriate. Many countries are struggling with issues similar to Barbados. Many have tremendous resources and have not been able to do this. We will keep trying,” the Chief Medical Officer said.
    “We in the ministry don’t have all the answers. BAMP [Barbados Association of Medical Practitioners] have to be partners with us on this. The Barbados Nurses’ Association has to be partners on this. We want to work with these partners for the greater good. We are willing and able to hear all parties.”
    George said the burden on authorities was now being increased by people requesting PCR tests in order to leave the country.
    (BA)

    Source: Nation


  18. Mia, Bostic: Sorry for results delay
    Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley and Minister of Health Jeffrey Bostic both apologised to Barbadians yesterday for a breakdown in the timely return of COVID-19 test results due to the increase in swabbing done all this week.
    Both said they understood why Barbadians, in their anxiety, had flocked to know their status as it related to the disease, especially after Government indicated last week its intention to get to the bottom of contact tracing revolving around three clusters currently under investigation by public health authorities.
    All week on call-in programmes and on social media platforms, Barbadians aired their grievances regarding the time test results were being returned and a lack of information from Government.
    Bostic said the volume of testing had taken its toll.
    “I want to really apologise to all persons who have experienced delays in getting back test results. This is because of the
    high volume of tests being done at the Best-dos Santos Lab. We’ve actually exceeded the 2 000-test barrier in one day,” he said during an address from Ilaro Court, which also included chairman of Cabinet’s COVID-19 Sub-committee, Senator Dr Jerome Walcott.
    “It has created some challenges for us in compiling, processing and disseminating results,” Bostic said. “It is regrettable but it is something that is happening in all countries that are facing surges in COVID-19.”
    Mottley said Government had been burdened by the increase and stressed a lack of results did not mean the country was hiding something from citizens.
    “One of the things that happened was that a number of persons were nervous, not just who were primary or tertiary contacts, but who just wanted to have a test, and we felt and understand that anxiety but it has put a lot of pressure on the labs.
    “There is a backlog and we apologise for it,”
    the Prime Minister said, while noting that she met with public health officials trying to break down everything and “to come up with a clear categorisation of priorities for testing”. (BA)

    Source: Nation


  19. “The protocols have worked for Barbados for a long time. But internal mixing and persons starting to disobey the laws have led to . . . this situation. There have been breakdowns with regard to how the public moved around in December, with all the parties taking place,” he noted.

    There are two ideas in what follows. Don’t just bite on on of them

    1) Indeed it appears that the protocols controlling the spread of covid-19 from the new arrivals.

    2) It appears that the protocols did not (could not) factor in disobeying the laws.

    I arrive at the conclusion that follows some time ago, but I held back….. The failure that we are experiencing is not due to ineffective protocols, it is due to the outrageous behavior of people. Yes, people.


  20. “CURFEWS DOES NOT WORK IDIOTS BECAUSE THE VIRUS IS AROUND FROM BOTH ASYMPTOMATIC AND SYMPTOMATIC CARRIERS 24HRS A DAY NOT 8HRS AND CAN BE TRANSMITTED ANYTIME DURING THE 16HRS PEOPLE CAN FREELY MOVED AROUND.”

    There is some truth in the statement and if it was just a one prong approach to combating the virus then I would agree 100%.

    But a multi-prong approach is being employed.

    **New arrivals
    Testing
    Quarantining of active cases
    A second test for those who are nrgativr

    **Local population/All
    Quarantining of active cases
    Masking
    Social distancing
    Emphasizing proper hygiene

    Let us agree that no policy will be 100% effective, but surely you must agree that adherence to this approach will limit and eventually control the spread.


  21. The administration has my sympathy
    No numbers – hiding information
    Low numbers -under reporting.
    High numbers – those guys don’t know what they are doing


  22. “There is a backlog and we apologise for it,”

    Simple, self explanatory, honest and an apology.

    A reason for the backlog was also given. But most likely this will be inadequate as it doesn’t fit a sexy conspiracy theory.


  23. Theo when all is said and done you will be the last man standing on the deck trying to out this raging inferno
    Good luck


  24. The charts for this last week graphically illustrate the rapid escalation in Covid19 incidence in Barbados taken from the Worldometer site and compares the active cases in Barbados versus four Caribbean neighbours. The charts show an explosive increase in cases here and fluctuations at a high level at one week after the outbreak. N.B similar rapid increases in Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago and Guyana took around 5 weeks before they were stabilized and then showed their current decreasing trend. Barbados has been in this phase for only one week so far but a variety of aggressive measures have been taken by Government to control the outbreak and it is hoped that we will see a definite trend towards consistent reductions in active cases even before 5 weeks – Lyall Small

  25. @Mariposa
    Good to see that you are still fighting the good fight.

    The best made plans can go awry, but men with intelligence can adapt and tweak the plans. I continue to have confidence in the team.

    Life goes on regardless of what side we find or place ourselves on. Time was your friend and it will be mine also.

    In the end, I hope the winners are the people of Barbados.

    Stay strong.


  26. Read the last paragraph… thousands

    “All viruses, including the one that causes Covid-19, mutate.

    These tiny genetic changes happen as the virus makes new copies of itself to spread and thrive.

    Most are inconsequential, and a few can even be harmful to the virus’s survival, but some can make it more infectious or threatening to the host – humans.

    There are now many thousands of different versions, or variants, of the pandemic virus circulating. But experts’ concerns focus on a small number of these.”


  27. Theo sumbody has to push against this leadership stubbornness
    If not the end result could lead to wholesale devastation especially amongst the poor
    Presently too many Covid fires are being lighted and not many hoses available to out them
    Stay tuned


  28. Truly I am not having trouble being “shut-in” because I love my myself. I enjoy my own company. I am astonished that there are human beings who cannot stand their own company for 96 hours. If they can’t bear their own company for 96 hours, how on earth do such people expect their spouses to bear their company for 30, 40, 50 years and more?

    No wonder there are so many divorces.

    I should have trained to become a divorce lawyer. All like now I would be filthy rich separating the idiots from their spouses AND their money.

    P.S. Even while being “shut-in” I did five hours of outdoor work yesterday. Got my daily mega dose of fresh, free vitamin D. Did not as Critical Analyzer calls them, did not have to spend a single cent with Big Pharma to do so. People are talking about Vitamin C, but it is likely that free sunshine is the principal immune system booster, and in Barbados abundant free vitamin is available to all every single day of the year. Will do another 2 hours or so of outdoor work today.

    Free vitamin D
    Free exercise
    Free food

    A sibling who lives in the great white north, and who at time was 60+ [is 70+ now] went to the doctor to get a bone density check, the doctor basically told her “get out of here”. Your bone density is that of a 19 year old. She like me spent her childhood working on the family land. My dad fell out of bed in his 90’s. People asked “did he break his hip” No he did not break anything. He got up brushed himself off, went to work on his land and lived happily for a few more years.


  29. Apparently the tourist are given a form to sign which contains the covid rules, yet the liars are appearing before the court and saying that they did not know. The form should be available on line also and in multiple languages for those few of our visitors who can’t read English. The government needs to put in big, bold red at the top of the form “we will heavily fine you if you are caught breaching the rules” and if you are not a Bajan or a permanent resident we will NEVER permit you to enter Barbados again. NEVER. That shoud take care of most of these low class scofflaws. And when I say low class know that class has nothing to do with money or with education or citizenship or color.

    Low class is lying bad behavior. There are high class maids and laborers and low class Presidents, Prime Ministers and billionaires.


  30. https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js


  31. Beware bogus vaccines, St John warns
    Executive director of the Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA), Dr Joy St John, is cautioning about the possibility of bogus vaccines reaching the region.
    She said the possibility of bogus vaccines with questionable efficacy entering the Caribbean’s supply chain was discussed a week ago when the Pan American Health Organisation, CARPHA and chief medical officers of CARICOM countries had a virtual session to review plans for the rollout of a vaccination programme.
    “We had a special session with the chief medical officers of the region and we outlined to them all of the perspectives of vaccination, including the regulatory perspectives, because we are aware that there is criminal activity in the region,” said St John, a former Chief Medical Officer of Barbados.
    “We want them to be alert and not fall into any traps with bogus vaccines. Once there are counterfeit or substandard medications, vaccines would follow.
    Supply chain
    “What we are trying to avoid is that the true vaccine is diverted when used by the criminals
    to produce the bogus vaccines, because the supply chain is corrupted when they can insert their bogus vaccine and make a ton of money that way.
    St John added: “We have the technology to detect bogus vaccines. Remember, CARPHA is part of the [medical] security cluster, so we are working with our cluster and our security contacts globally to detect them.
    “We are also planning to train the [immigration] border authorities so they would detect these things because that is how they may get in. Somebody is going to try to make it in through the border.”
    International experts warn that bogus COVID-19 vaccines could provide people with a false sense of security against the ravages of the disease and may cause injury or death.
    “We are going to rely on the countries to be alert and to share information with us if they do any bilateral arrangements [to procure vaccines],” said St John.
    “With COVAX [an international consortium of vaccine suppliers], we would be
    assured that everything is good, but if they [CARICOM states] do bilateral arrangements, we are hoping they would come to CARPHA, show us what they are planning to buy so we can trace it. We have mechanisms with the Caribbean regulatory system to check these medications and vaccines to make sure they are the real thing,” she said. (TB)

    Source: Nation


  32. Change to Category 1 testing
    Individuals who fall into Category 1 for swabbing will be accommodated at the Branford Taitt Polyclinic and the Best-dos Santos Testing Facility from tomorrow, starting at 8:30 a.m.
    The Ministry of Health and Wellness advised of this change yesterday in a press release as a result of the current logistical and staffing challenges.
    It was previously announced by health officials that the Glebe Polyclinic would be one of the two testing facilities for Category 1.
    Those in Category 1 are medical officers, primary contacts, Royal Barbados Police Force personnel, Her Majesty’s Prison Dodds staff and inmates, Barbados Defence Force personnel, all medical personnel and Immigration officers.
    Included are border security, the Barbados Port Inc., Customs officers, patients awaiting tests for medical treatment and patients in medical care facilities.
    The release also noted that additionally, the Branford Taitt and Eunice Gibson Polyclinics would be open for testing today from 8 a.m. until noon.
    (BGIS)


  33. Nuff nuff PR
    Govt feet must be held to the fire


  34. The Ministry of Health and Wellness said today that on Saturday, 70 new cases of COVID-19 were recorded, while 16 people were released from isolation.

    70 new cases

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/01/10/70-new-cases-virus/

  35. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    The time in now to put much more emphasis on treatment so we can all get on with our lives.


  36. Sandals Resort no longer de-listed
    SEVEN DAYS AFTER it was dropped as an approved quarantine hotel, Sandals has been restored to the list.
    The site visitbarbados. org is again showing the listing of Sandals Barbados Resort & Spa and Sandals Royal among those approved by Government.
    On December 29 in a press release, the Chief Medical Officer announced that Sandals was off

    the designated list from January 5 for several “verified complaints of breaches” of the COVID-19 protocols. However, regular stay at the hotel continued.
    On January 4, Senator Jerome Walcott, chair of Cabinet’s COVID-19 Subcommittee, said the hotel had corrected some issues but not all.
    The Barbados Hotel & Tourism Association later said it was liaising with the Ministry of Health and Wellness on the matter. ( AC)


  37. David;

    Holy Moses!!!

    This seems to be very serious.
    I wonder, by its timing, if it is a ploy to stir up bad blood between the USA and China since its diplomacy leakage might well be unprecedented. Or could it be fake? Any information on its provenance would be interesting! I couldn’t find any further info on Google.

    I wonder what GP’s reaction will be


  38. @Lyall

    Document sent by a source.


  39. Prominent family physician Dr Adrian Lorde has urged health authorities to stop giving Barbadians false hope and tell the truth about the fight against the virus.

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/01/12/family-doc-seeks-answers-on-covid-19-fight/


  40. @David

    Do you know where data on annual mortality in Barbados can be found?


  41. @ David January 12, 2021 9:43 AM

    David, this is a last gasp/last grasps from the Trumpists.


  42. @Simple Simon

    As you know BU is an equal opportunity forum.


  43. One of the people who signed this diatribe to the FBI is:

    Robert S. Spalding III is a retired United States Air Force brigadier general. He currently serves as a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. The Hudson Institute is a politically conservative, American think tank based in Washington, D.C. from May 2017 to January 2018 [that is under the Trump administration he served as] Senior Director for Strategic Planning, National Security Council, White House, Washington D.C.While at the National Security Council, Spalding notably wrote a memo calling for nationalizing the development of 5G wireless network. Spalding’s advocacy was reportedly deemed outside his authority and he was subsequently asked to leave the NSC.He has since been notable as a critic of China.


  44. @Dullard

    Should be with the AG’s office.


  45. https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js


  46. Also signing the diatribe is Randy Hillier.

    Hillier’s education: Hillier is a licensed construction electrician with a diploma in electrical engineering technology from Algonquin College. Algonquin College is NOT the same as Harvard College.

    In June 2020, Hillier came under fire for appearing to trivialize Minister Ahmed Hussen’s experience with racism, when in response to a CTV article where Hussen discussed experiences of prejudice while shopping, Hillier tweeted “A guilty conscience?” The tweet has since been deleted but has been met with sharp criticism online and multiple accusations of racism, including by Andrea Horwath who commented “At a time when Black people are protesting for their lives, you’re denying the reality of Black, Indigenous and racialized people.” That same month he took part in a rally protesting COVID-19 lockdown measures in Ontario at Queen’s Park, and was later condemned by [Conservative] Premier Doug Ford who described Hillier’s participation in the rally as “totally irresponsible” and said it goes against “what everybody has been working for.”

    In October 2020, Kingston public health officials sent a letter to Hillier expressing concerns regarding his spreading of disinformation about the COVID-19 pandemic. Hillier had previously refused to say whether he thought the pandemic was real, said he was anti-mask and likened the pandemic to a bad flu season. He had also asserted on Twitter that public health officials were guilty of crimes against humanity.

    On November 26, 2020, Hillier organized an anti-COVID-19 lockdown rally at Queen’s Park. [Ontario’s provincial government meets at Queen’s Park] Unlike the first such rally that Hillier organized (on October 21), this rally led to Hillier being issued a court summons by police, for violating the lockdown restrictions in place in Toronto at the time, which limited outdoor gatherings to 10 people. His court date is set for January 7, 2021.

    On December 29, 2020, Hillier tweeted a Christmas photo of a gathering at his home with 15 people from multiple households. At the time, Ontario was in a province-wide lockdown and the number of people allowed to gather indoors had been restricted to only members of a family living in the same household.

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