We Can’t Afford Capitalism in the Year of the Plague (Boson Workers) 25 March 2020

The COVID-19 crisis, like the 2008 crash, has exposed the myth of capitalist individualism. It has made clear that the banks and corporations cannot survive without massive state support.

If the capitalist class is unopposed in its efforts to make the working class bear the weight of the crisis, it will be at the cost of millions of lives. Mankind has reached a point where the most basic function of society–the preservation of human life–is incompatible with capitalism.

As the pandemic spreads, the economic impact is acquiring dimensions that are without precedent in the history of the United States. As people are being instructed to “shelter in place” and practice “social distancing,” the economy is shutting down.

While deceitful and cynical lip service is being paid to protecting workers, the only purpose of the negotiations in Washington is to protect the wealth and profits of the superrich corporate-financial oligarchs. On a scale even greater than the bailout of 2008-09, the titans of Wall Street and the corporate boardrooms are demanding that the government place limitless sums at their disposal.
Up to this point, the federal government has spent less than $10 billion on emergency disaster relief related to the pandemic. And yet the US Treasury has purchased some $600 billion in securities in recent weeks, meaning it has spent 60 times more money propping up the banks than on addressing the healthcare crisis.

On top of the more than $2 trillion that has already been pledged to backstop the values of financial assets held by major banks, Congress is debating an additional $2 trillion bailout package.
The vast majority of that proposal consists in various handouts to business in the form of a payroll tax holiday and loans, including measures specifically targeting the airline and other industries. Less than $50 billion of the bill funds emergency measures to combat the pandemic. Just one company, Boeing, is demanding a bailout larger than every public health measure contained in the bill.

The New York Times declared in an editorial published yesterday, “The only practical way to limit mass unemployment, and to preserve previously viable companies, is for the government to pump money into the private sector.”

The last time this was done, in the response to the 2008 crash, the outcome was a bonanza for the superrich and affluent holders of financial assets. The wealth of the 400 richest people in America soared from $1.27 trillion in 2009 to $2.96 trillion in 2019.

The ugly reality of capitalist financial practices and the grotesque plundering of corporate assets refute the lying phrase that is intoned whenever reference is made to the needs of the working class: “There is no money!”

The problem is not an absence of money, but the control of society’s productive forces by the capitalist class.

Capitalist Anarchy Fuels COVID-19 Pandemic – For a Planned Economy Under Workers Rule! (Boston Indymedia) 16 March 2020

For the green zealots, COVID-19 is humanity’s penance for sins against the planet – by Frank Furedi – 20 March 2020

green zealot
Green zealots want to turn the global catastrophe of Covid-19 into fuel for their alarmist extinction narrative. By blaming humanity’s impact on the planet for the outbreak, they hope to mobilize support for their cause.

The hastily cobbled together green playbook on the unfolding global pandemic seeks to hold humanity responsible for the outbreak of Covid-19. Its rhetoric of blame is often just that – rhetoric.

The communications strategy adopted by green scaremongers is to continually raise questions about the possibility that our neglect of nature has brought Covid-19 down upon us. The more frequently such questions are posed the more likely that their speculation will mutate into a taken-for-granted fact. “Tip of the iceberg: is our destruction of nature responsible for Covid-19?” asks a headline in the Guardian. The manner in which this question is posed invites readers to respond, “quite likely.

To pose questions about the link to man-made climate change is often presented as the normal response to the crisis. A commentary on Inside Climate News illustrates this rhetorical strategy.

Now, questions have arisen about whether climate change contributed to the outbreak of Covid-19, whose spread the World Health Organization declared a pandemic on Wednesday. For example, did habitat loss, driven in part by climate change, make it easier for pathogens to spread among wildlife and for the virus to jump to humans? Does air pollution, mainly from the burning of fossil fuels, make some people more vulnerable to contracting the illness?

As one question reinforces the next, the reader is encouraged to imagine that in some shape or form, climate change is likely to be connected to the Covid-19 outbreak.

It is almost as if green activists are desperately hoping that someone will come up with a shred of evidence that can be used to prove that one way or another that human-created global warming is responsible for the outbreak. Their interest is far removed from containing the virus’ threat. On the contrary, their narrative takes great delight in using Covid-19 as a weapon to be wielded against environmentally irresponsible people. Statements on this score transmit the message ‘that it is all your fault’. In this vein, Dr Aaaron Bernstein, Interim Director Of The Center for Climate, Health, and the Global Environment, offers a cautionary tale about the impact of human behaviour on the planet:

You look at climate change, we have transformed the nature of the Earth. We have fundamentally changed the composition of the atmosphere, and as such, we shouldn’t be surprised that that affects our health. We have, as a species, grown up in partnership with the planet and life we live with. So, when we change the rules of the game, we shouldn’t expect that it wouldn’t affect our health, for better or worse. That’s true of the climate. And the same principle holds for the emergence of infections.

Bernstein does not provide any arguments for his casual linking of the transformation of the world by humans to the emergence of infections. That’s not the point of his statement. His objective is to morally condemn the very human aspiration to change the world and to imply that we have brought the current global tragedy upon ourselves.

Not so long ago, with the development of science we learned that a disaster, such as a plague or an earthquake, was not caused by mysterious vengeful forces – they were rightly called ‘Acts of Nature’. For the green zealot, disasters are never just Acts of Nature; they are a penalty that humanity pays for seeking to modernize the world.

For green ideologue, the pandemic provides an opportunity to mobilize support for their cause. For us, the flu outbreak constitutes a threat that will be overcome with single minded commitment to the cause of humanity. History shows that – contrary to the green world view – humans are not the problem, they are the solution.

………………

Frank Furedi is an author and social commentator is an emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Kent in Canterbury. Author of How Fear Works: The Culture of Fear in the 21st Century. Follow him on Twitter @Furedibyte

A Few Music Videos for the Plague Year – 18 March 2020


The Police – Don’t Stand So Close to Me!

Fever — Peggy Lee

Take a few lyrics out of Peggy Lee’s classic ‘Fever’ and it basically becomes a letter to what we know so far about the coronavirus.

“Everybody’s got the fever. That is somethin’ you all know. Fever isn’t such a new thing. Fever started long time ago,” Lee croons.

It may be a reminder of the actual side effects of the virus, but the music is so cool and smooth, you’ll be snapping your fingers along with it anyway.

It’s the End of the World — R.E.M.

R.E.M.’s ‘It’s the End of the World’ is the perfect song for any international panic, and people seem to run back to it in times of uncertainty. In the last week, the 1987 song has found its way back into the top 100 sales chart on iTunes and it’s been climbing day-by-day.

No matter how bad your friends or the media or politicians may make things sound, just remember this little line: “It’s the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fine.”

Meds — Placebo

The song has nothing to do with a literal virus, but its title and Placebo’s band name dictate they must be on any medical-themed playlist. Plus, what good is staying at home while the world shuts down around you if you’re not using the time to take deep dives into the music of bands like Placebo?

“Baby…did you forget to take your meds?” 

Down with the Sickness — Disturbed

Disturbed’s 2000 hit song feels like it was almost made for today. Get down with the sickness, whether that sickness be the actual virus we hear about everyday or the mass hysteria that seems to spread so much more quickly.

Panic — The Smiths

The Smiths asked a question in this 1987 song that any common sense person would be hard-pressed not to ask themselves on a daily basis today: “could life ever be sane again?”

You can’t control the panic hitting the streets, the travel bans, businesses closures, or government restrictions, but you can at least rock out to a Smiths song and probably feel a little better about it all.

“Panic on the streets of London. Panic on the streets of Birmingham. I wonder to myself: Could life ever be sane again?”

Splendid Isolation — Warren Zevon

Being quarantined at home is not all that bad. Warren Zevon’s 1989 love song to the virtues of being alone is just the positive spin you need when you start feeling cabin fever sink in.

“I’m putting tinfoil up on the windows. Lying down in the dark to dream. I don’t want to see their faces. I don’t want to hear them scream.”

Lost in the Supermarket — The Clash

Been to a supermarket recently? It’s not a whole lot of fun. Panic has sunk its nasty claws into much of the public and their response has been to buy a whole lot of toilet paper and invade en masse every grocery store near them … all while trying to avoid a disease they are afraid they will catch if they come into contact with other people — rational thought isn’t central to mob mentality.

‘Lost in the Supermarket’ is exactly how any normal person should feel walking into a grocery store today. The Clash’s angsty lyrics somehow fit the situation like a glove.

“I’m all lost in the supermarket. I can no longer shop happily.”

Toxicity — System of a Down

The “toxicity of our city” is a lyric just about anyone anywhere can relate to in this moment. This 2001 System of a Down song also has a madcap energy that feels inspired by today’s daily hysteria.

Stayin’ Alive — Bee Gees

Any list related to the coronavirus should probably at least attempt to end on a positive note, and what’s more positive than music from the Bee Gees?

Remember, folks, through it all — the mass hysteria, the empty grocery stores, the panicky politicians — we are just “stayin’ alive” and if you do that with the Bee Gees playing in the background, you’ll feel a whole lot cooler doing it.

Chic Le Freak – Freak Out! 

https://archive.is/kYfQW

 

US Capitalist Health Care Puts US Population at Risk – China Mobilized to Contain COVID-19 (Boston Indymedia) 4 March 2020

COVID-19

MARCH 2—While it is too early, as we go to press, to know whether or not the coronavirus epidemic that broke out late last year in China has spread into a global pandemic, one thing is clear. While the outbreak created huge challenges for China, the largest and most powerful of the states where capitalism has been overthrown, that country’s push to contain the coronavirus underscores the vast superiority of a collectivized economy, however mismanaged by the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) bureaucracy. In the U.S., where health care is subject to the blind forces of production for private profit, the capitalist rulers have dismally failed to take basic measures to control outbreaks of the disease, COVID-19. Not surprisingly, the virus seems to have been circulating for weeks undetected in the suburbs of Seattle and perhaps elsewhere in the country, endangering many lives.

The new coronavirus is the third of its kind believed to have made the jump from animals to humans in the past two decades, following the viruses associated with SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) in 2002 and MERS (Middle East Respiratory Syndrome) in 2012. Wild animal food markets are the suspected origin of both the SARS outbreak and the current one. Much about COVID-19 is not known. As of yet, there is no specific antiviral treatment, and the development, testing and production of a vaccine will likely take a year or more.

As of today, the disease has reportedly killed over 3,000 people worldwide and infected nearly 90,000, although the actual numbers, especially of the latter, are likely much higher. Most victims have been in the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the disease was first identified, and the surrounding province of Hubei. Despite initial bureaucratic inertia and outright cover-ups, Beijing has made Herculean efforts at containment through quarantines, a regional lockdown of some 60 million people, the severe curtailing of travel and the closure of factories and schools in much of the country.

China’s government has also allocated significant medical and other resources to fight the disease. These measures appear to have had some success, and the rate of new cases within the country has begun to fall. The head of a World Health Organization (W.H.O.) delegation that went to Wuhan and other cities in China praised its “all-government, all-society approach” as “probably the most ambitious and agile” in history. He declared: “The world is in your debt” (South China Morning Post, 24 February).

The logistics of controlling this disease would be very difficult for any country, no matter how wealthy. When epidemics strike, public health measures are required that are sometimes drastic and intrusive but essential to save lives. Especially when no vaccine or reliable treatment is available, measures like quarantine, the halting of transport and the cancellation of public events are the best available means to impede the spread of the disease. Thus, these measures taken by China to combat COVID-19, although belated, have been vitally necessary. So is the just-announced immediate and comprehensive ban on the wildlife food industry, valued at $74 billion.

COVID-19 Hits Capitalist World

The Chinese bought time for other countries to get ready to combat the disease. But as one U.S. “health security” expert acknowledged, “We didn’t make good use of that time and now we’re heading into a very dangerous situation.” In the event of a full-blown COVID-19 epidemic in the U.S., the country is poised to experience acute shortages of hospital beds, ventilators, surgical masks and other protective equipment. Already, problems with the manufacture and distribution of diagnostic kits has stalled testing for the infection and hamstrung treatment efforts. Unions representing hospital, airport and other service workers have raised demands for proper training and outfitting to reduce the risk of transmission. Yesterday, two health care workers in California tested positive after they were exposed to an infected patient.

Washington also displayed complete disregard for the threat of contagion when it evacuated 14 infected Americans from Japan on a commercial flight with hundreds of passengers. Those Americans had been onboard the Diamond Princess, a cruise ship put in quarantine in the harbor of Yokohama, only for Japanese officials to have the sick mix with the healthy, including crew members. Thus, dozens more were infected. Subsequently, all passengers were allowed to leave the ship even though they might later develop symptoms. Other capitalist governments have not done much better.

Thousands have lined up outside South Korean stores to buy surgical masks, which are not widely available due to hoarding and price markups by manufacturers. In Italy, which has also seen a scramble for supplies, the disease has broken out in areas near Milano and Venice, chiefly in hospitals. Nonetheless, health care personnel there are being refused testing unless they have spent at least one hour in close contact with someone known to have COVID-19. Last week, a planned press conference by the governor of the Lombardy region to announce a “return to normalcy” was canceled and the room evacuated when it emerged that his main aide had just tested positive and that the governor had decided to self-quarantine.

The outbreak in Iran will be particularly difficult to control, as draconian U.S. sanctions have devastated the economy and health care system. It certainly did not help matters when the reactionary Islamic regime made no attempt to shut down the shrines and gathering places in the Shia pilgrimage site of Qom, the country’s hub of the disease. Pilgrims from Qom are thought to account for most of those so far infected in Kuwait, Bahrain, Iraq and Lebanon.

COVID-19 infections have now been confirmed around the globe, including isolated cases in South and Central America and in Africa. If the disease becomes endemic in any semicolonial country—and especially those in sub-Saharan Africa—where modern health care systems are generally poor or barely existent, the number of victims would skyrocket. Responsibility for this loss of life would lie with the handful of imperialist powers, chiefly the U.S., that keep the underdeveloped world in destitution while pillaging its resources and labor. In the countries subjugated by imperialism, even eminently practical public health measures such as vaccines and clean water are unavailable to hundreds of millions.

Wealth Care U.S.A.

In the U.S., Democratic Party politicians have predictably pointed the finger at Trump for this public health disaster in the making. True to form, the Commander-in-Chief has downplayed the threat of an epidemic here in a bid to stem the stock market slide and shore up his political standing, while tapping religious wing nut Vice President Mike Pence to head up a coronavirus task force. Republicans are hardly the only ones who make a mockery of medical science, with Democrats having long pandered to the anti-vaccine quackery responsible for outbreaks of preventable diseases like measles. Neither is Trump unique among recent presidents to propose cuts to the Centers for Disease Control; Barack Obama did so too.

In the richest country in the world, millions go untreated or die every year because of medicine-for-profit. This system cannot even make certain everyone gets a flu shot, even as tens of thousands die of the disease annually. Behind such human suffering stands the reality that the control of disease is as much a social question as a scientific one. For example, the vaccine for human papilloma virus (HPV), the most common sexually transmitted disease, is known to provide substantial protection against cervical cancer, which kills over 4,000 women a year. But many youth in the U.S. still do not receive it due to the prevalence of anti-vaccine mysticism and social stigma against “promiscuity.” Four decades ago, in the early 1980s, the ruling class turned a blind eye to the AIDS epidemic, dismissing it as a “gay disease.” HIV has since killed tens of millions globally.

Anti-science attitudes and social backwardness combine with the material interests of the owners of the U.S. health care industry to produce deadly results for the general population. Driving down costs to boost profits is the name of the game, never mind investing in “excess” capacity like stockpiles of medical supplies, supplementary hospital beds and sufficient medical staff. As in manufacturing industries, hospitals are stocked with supplies on a “just in time” basis to avoid the expense of maintaining inventories. With many of those supplies, not to mention pharmaceutical ingredients, normally made in China and factories there now shut down or focused on production for domestic needs, shortages are already being felt in the U.S. Meanwhile, the hospitals are woefully understaffed.

Over the past decade, more than 120 hospitals, overwhelmingly in rural areas or the black and Latino inner cities, have been shut down because they were unprofitable. Given the dearth of hospital beds, in 2013 members of the government’s Hospital Preparedness Program proposed a health emergency policy of “reverse triage,” in which hospital patients would be sent home early to make room for the newly infected. In an epidemic, patients would be packed in hospital hallways, lobbies, lounges and waiting rooms.

The dire state of the country’s public health system is symptomatic of the deep racial and class bias that afflicts health care in this sick capitalist society. Investment in the health of the population as a whole is anemic unless the well-being of the rich and powerful is threatened or the owners of industry fear not having a sufficient number of workers fit enough to exploit. The rulers also worry about having healthy armed forces to deploy to defend their global interests. Meanwhile, working people are made to shell out a fortune on health insurance, prescription drugs and hospital stays. One Miami man who had developed flu-like symptoms after returning from China last month went to the hospital to find out if he had COVID-19 and was hit with a $3,270 bill. Medical price-gouging has driven many to ruin.

The labor movement must place itself in the forefront of a fight for socialized medicine, with quality health care for all, free at the point of delivery (see “For Socialized Medicine! Expropriate the Health Care Industry!” WV No. 1170, 21 February). Such a fight would take up other crucial demands, such as for unconditional, unlimited paid sick leave for everyone, as well as for union control of safety to ensure proper training and protocols in the face of new pathogens. This class-struggle perspective requires combating the policies of the trade-union officialdom, which subordinates the interests of workers to the needs of the capitalists and their political representatives, especially in the Democratic Party. What is posed is building a workers party committed to expropriating the health care and other industries through socialist revolution—the only road to building a society where medical science, technological development and all the productive forces would be put to the service of all.

Why We Defend China

While on balance the response of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) to the coronavirus has been very impressive, it has been hampered by the privileged bureaucratic regime sitting atop the workers state. The smashing of capitalist class rule through the 1949 Revolution laid the basis to establish and build a planned, socialized economy, which brought enormous gains for the workers and peasants. However, the parasitic CCP bureaucracy has from the start monopolized political power, deforming the workers state and undermining those gains.

In the case of COVID-19, the CCP bureaucrats initially tried to cover up the new disease, a disastrous step that severely impeded its containment. When medical professionals in Wuhan attempted to sound a warning to others in their field, they were detained and reprimanded for “spreading rumors.” Local officials passed the buck, professing that they could not share information about the virus without approval from above, i.e., from the central bureaucracy around party leader and Chinese president Xi Jinping. One of the doctors who tried to alert others, 34-year-old ophthalmologist Li Wenliang, later died of the disease, triggering an outpouring of popular grief and anger.

Faced with public outrage and growing evidence of the severity of the disease, the CCP finally moved to contain it. Chinese scientists were able to rapidly sequence the genome of the new virus and made it publicly available to researchers and health professionals throughout the world. Two new hospitals, one with 1,000 beds and the other with 1,600, were constructed in less than two weeks, a remarkable achievement. More than 41,000 medical and support personnel were mobilized from all over the country, including from the People’s Liberation Army.

With mass transit shut down in Wuhan, the salaries of cab drivers needed to transport sick people, food and supplies were doubled. The production of face masks in factories all over the country was put into overdrive and the workers were paid several times their normal wage. Fees have been waived for medical testing and treatment related to the disease.

Such measures speak to the immense advantages of a collectivized economy. It is impossible to imagine any capitalist country, marked by the relentless drive for profits, doing anything comparable. Notably, Vietnam, another bureaucratically deformed workers state, responded rapidly to contain a COVID-19 outbreak there with a community lockdown, enhanced testing and resource reassignment. These are graphic illustrations of why authentic Marxists, i.e., Trotskyists, stand for the unconditional defense of China (as well as the other workers states of Vietnam, Cuba, North Korea and Laos) against imperialism and capitalist counterrevolution.

This defense does not imply the slightest political support to the self-interested CCP bureaucracy, whose control over planning and the allocation of resources results in gross economic and social imbalances. The dismissal of local bureaucrats in Wuhan who initially tried to cover up the new coronavirus typifies how the bureaucracy works: lower-level officials are sacrificed to allay public anger, while the top bureaucracy pretends to be infallible. Such practices have become even more extreme under the Xi regime, which attempts to present him as an all-knowing leader.

From Mao Zedong to Xi Jinping, the CCP rulers have sown the illusion that China on its own can achieve socialism—a society of all-sided material abundance—if only given sufficient time. The corollary to this dogma of “socialism in one country” is “peaceful coexistence” with the imperialist powers. This nationalist Stalinist perversion of Marxism is both utopian and reactionary, opposing the necessary fight for workers revolution internationally in order to accommodate imperialism. A proletarian political revolution is necessary to replace bureaucratic rule with that of elected workers and peasants councils. Such a regime of workers democracy would strive to strengthen the collectivized property forms and would direct centralized planning, while promoting the fight for a world socialist order.

Medical Advances and Anti-Science Quackery

China’s health system has greatly improved since the 2003 SARS crisis. At that time, many millions were suffering from the dismantling of the “iron rice bowl” guarantee of basic medical care and other social security to the mass of the population. Those cutbacks were part of far-reaching “market reforms” introduced as a bureaucratic response to economic stagnation and an attempt to use the whip of the market to spur modernization and growth. The prospect of “free market” misery sparked widespread resistance, including strikes, by the Chinese proletariat.

Against this backdrop, we impressionistically endorsed the view that while China remained a workers state “it is wrong to say that the planned economy persists” in a letter reply headlined “China, Centralized Planning and ‘Market Socialism’” (WV No. 838, 10 December 2004). This position was later repeated in WV and other publications of the International Communist League. A meeting of the ICL’s International Secretariat last year concluded that this assessment was false. Despite the breakup of some smaller state-owned enterprises and reorganization of larger ones, as well as the growth of a private capitalist sector, China retains large parts of a (bureaucratically operated) planned economy while subjecting them to market mechanisms. This can be seen in the massive infrastructure development during the last world financial crisis and is today borne out by what China has done to rein in the coronavirus contagion, a centrally directed effort from top to bottom.

Some 95 percent of the population is now covered by state-funded insurance plans, and life expectancy in Beijing and Shanghai is higher than in New York City or Washington, D.C. Yet there are still great imbalances. These are mainly based on the fact that, even with all its economic advances, China remains poor overall in comparison to the advanced capitalist powers. But bureaucratic misrule compounds the problem.

Despite huge infrastructure expenditures since 2008, per capita spending on health care is a disgraceful 82nd in the world. In general, timely access to quality care still hinges on the ability to pay, which is no problem for wealthy businessmen and top CCP officials. Those who can afford private care don’t have to wait in line at overcrowded public facilities. For the masses, out-of-pocket payments normally have to cover about 30 percent of medical costs.

Beijing claims that the number of doctors relative to the Chinese population is fairly high by international standards. But roughly half of those do not even have a bachelor’s degree. Many were trained only at post-junior-high vocational schools. The disparity in medical training contributes to the country’s urban-rural divide in health care. Most well-educated physicians are concentrated in urban hospitals, while those lacking a bachelor’s degree are overwhelmingly found in rural areas. Furthermore, within the cities access to those well-trained doctors is unequal, with the well-to-do having the inside track. A longstanding shortage of nurses also hampers the provision of decent care.

Even worse, many Chinese doctors continue to practice so-called traditional Chinese medicine, which has no scientific merit. In this activity, they have the open support of the CCP regime. China’s National Health Commission has demanded that medical institutions actively promote this quackery. Xi himself calls for a “combination of western and traditional Chinese medicines”—as if science existed in regional variants—to be used in treating the coronavirus. The bureaucracy’s positive attitude toward traditional medicine goes back to Mao’s peasant-based CCP in the 1930s, which reversed the party’s early opposition to medical quackery (see “Pseudoscience, Snake Oil and Stalinism in China,” WV No. 1028, 9 August 2013).

Counterrevolutionaries in Hong Kong Run Amok

The spread of COVID-19 to the PRC’s capitalist Hong Kong enclave has again exposed the utterly reactionary nature of the pro-imperialist “democracy movement” there (see article page 4). Waving U.S. flags and chanting, “Liberate Hong Kong,” anti-China mobs have besieged sites designated for COVID-19 screening, and protesters threw a Molotov cocktail at an unoccupied housing project slated to become a quarantine center. Using the pretext of the coronavirus, in early February thousands of medical personnel in Hong Kong waged a reactionary one-week strike directed against the Chinese deformed workers state, demanding a full shutdown of the border with the mainland.

Imperialist poster boy Joshua Wong is among those who have demanded that W.H.O. director general Tedros Ghebreyesus resign due to supposed “unreasonable favoritism towards China.” Some have even insisted that “real” Hong Kongers, i.e., not Chinese from the mainland or migrant workers from elsewhere in Asia, must get priority in sales of face masks to protect against infection.

Hong Kong, which became an autonomous region of China after British colonial rule ended in 1997, remains one of the most unequal places on earth. Nearly 70 percent of low-income families cannot afford to buy masks or disinfectant. Under its “one country, two systems” policy, the CCP regime has criminally made itself directly responsible for maintaining a capitalist economy in Hong Kong. Upholding the interests of the Hong Kong bourgeoisie against those they exploit and oppress is a massive betrayal of the working people there and on the Chinese mainland. We say: Expropriate the Hong Kong tycoons!

U.S. Imperialism’s Anti-China Offensive

China’s battle against COVID-19 comes in the period of the U.S. trade/tariff war and stepped-up military provocations in the Asia-Pacific region. The ultimate aim, upon which Democrats and Republicans fully agree, is to promote counterrevolution that restores capitalist rule in China and makes it one giant sweatshop under the imperialist boot. The trade-union bureaucracy, with its “America First” protectionism and anti-Communist China-bashing, plays right into this reactionary campaign.

The bourgeois media in the U.S. has helped whip up anti-China sentiment around the coronavirus, with the Wall Street Journal running a February 3 opinion piece titled “China Is the Real Sick Man of Asia,” which sparked outrage in Beijing. Even though Trump praised the Xi regime’s handling of the coronavirus in his February 4 State of the Union address, some of the most fervid anti-China hawks in his administration have seized on the crisis to lash out at Beijing. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross ghoulishly told Fox Business News that China’s economic slowdown due to the epidemic could “help to accelerate the return of jobs” to the U.S.

The medical emergency has indeed hit China’s economy hard, though the depth and duration of this blow cannot yet be predicted. China’s role in the world economy is vastly greater today than in 2003, with its share of global GDP rising four-fold to 16 percent. The disruption of international supply lines is reverberating worldwide. Wuhan is a major manufacturing hub, especially in auto and fiber optics; one local company is the largest maker of the cables that carry data around the planet. Meanwhile, industries based in the U.S. and elsewhere that sell to the vast Chinese consumer market are already taking a major hit.

In the name of curtailing spread of the disease, the U.S. and other countries have temporarily banned entry by Chinese citizens and foreign nationals who recently visited China. The U.S. has now extended a ban to Iran travel. The W.H.O., along with the Chinese government, initially opposed such bans. Since then, the W.H.O. has issued contradictory statements. Its February 29 update, while advising against travel restrictions, also acknowledges that they “may only be justified at the beginning of an outbreak.” Such restrictions “must be based on a careful risk assessment, be proportionate to the public health risk, be short in duration, and be reconsidered regularly as the situation evolves.” One reason for caution is the lack of adequate screening mechanisms, particularly for asymptomatic carriers of the virus.

We are in no position to judge the public health merits of the travel bans and thus take no position for or against them. However, we recognize that the restrictions imposed by capitalist governments like those in the U.S. and Australia are motivated not only by medical concerns but also by racial bigotry and national chauvinism. The U.S. has a long history of anti-Asian racism, exemplified by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and Japanese American internment camps during World War II. A century ago, Asian immigrants in the U.S. and other imperialist countries were reviled for supposedly being bearers of syphilis, malaria and other diseases.

Today, racist abuse against people of Chinese descent is on the rise. In Los Angeles, an Asian American middle schooler was beaten up after students accused him of having the virus. Asian immigrants traveling through the Midwest were barred from two hotels in Indiana. Restaurants, shops and cafes in Italy, Japan and South Korea posted signs denying entry to Chinese people. Anti-Chinese racism has been particularly virulent in Australia, where newspaper headlines warned of a “Chinese virus” and ordered “China kids stay home.” In France, where one paper ran an editorial titled “Yellow Peril,” postings on the Twitter hashtag #JeNeSuisPasUnVirus (I am not a virus) have exposed multiple instances of racist taunting in schoolyards and of subway passengers moving away from people who appear Asian.

Helping to prepare the ground for this “yellow peril” racism, the FBI has for years been smearing Chinese scientists, professors and students in the U.S. as potential spies for Beijing. Last year, the Feds, together with officials at the National Institutes of Health, compelled a renowned cancer hospital in Houston to fire three scientists allegedly with ties to China. Dozens of similar investigations are said to be underway nationwide. Such witchhunts are the antithesis of the international collaboration and coordination that is a wellspring of scientific advance.

Such world cooperation is crucial to expediently address the problems presented by infectious disease, which know no boundaries. But this need is severely impeded by the capitalist-imperialist system. Capitalism has created a world market, but the domination of that market by the advanced capitalist countries produces war, massive inequality and poverty. The means of production must be torn out of the hands of the capitalist class on an international scale through a series of proletarian revolutions. This will lay the basis for an internationally planned, collectivized economy, which will unleash the productive forces to satisfy want.

All aspects of human health would make a great leap, with poverty, homelessness and starvation eradicated from the earth. Among the many decisions to make through considered debate will be how much to invest in supplementary public health resources in order to maximize readiness for the inevitable arrival of new pathogens. It is the purpose of the International Communist League (Fourth Internationalist) to forge the vanguard workers parties that are necessary to lead the proletariat, at the head of all the dispossessed and oppressed, in fighting for a socialist future.

………….

Italy asked Germany for ventilators.  Germany passed a law preventing the export of ventilators.  Italy turned to China.

China COVID-19

https://archive.is/qvfoR#selection-443.4-443.84

https://redd.it/fk458s

http://boston.indymedia.org/newswire/display/228854/index.php

Maryland: Police Raid Home of 4Chan Reddit Libertarian and Shoot Him Dead – Was Militia Advocate (AP) 13 March 2020

Lawyer: Man killed by officer was asleep when police fired

Duncan Socrates Lemp

This 2019 photo shows Duncan Lemp in Venice, Italy. Lemp was asleep in his bedroom when police opened fire from outside his house, killing him and wounding his girlfriend, an attorney for the 21-year-old mans family said Friday, March 13, 2020.

Update:

https://www.judicialwatch.org/press-releases/police-shooting/

Judicial Watch Sues Montgomery Co., MD, Police Dep’t for Body Cam Footage in Fatal Police Shooting of Duncan Lemp During ‘No-Knock’ Raid

(Washington, DC) – Judicial Watch announced today it filed a Public Information Act (PIA) lawsuit against the Montgomery County, MD, Police Department (MCPD) seeking all body-cam videos from the fatal shooting of Duncan Socrates Lemp.

The 21-year-old Lemp, a student and software developer, was shot and killed by police in his Potomac, Maryland home during the execution of a “no-knock” search warrant in the early morning hours of March 12, 2020.

Lemp’s family reportedly said that Lemp and his family were asleep “when police besieged the residence from the front of the house” and the family was “awakened by shots fired through Duncan’s bedroom window followed by the sound of flash bangs.” According to the family’s attorney, an eyewitness said Lemp was asleep in his bedroom when police opened fire from outside the house.

Police disputed that account. The MCPD said in a statement that SWAT team officers were acting on an anonymous tip that Lemp was in possession of firearms that he was prohibited from having “due to his criminal history as a juvenile.”

The MCPD maintains that, upon making contact with Lemp, officers identified themselves as the police and gave Lemp multiple orders to show his hands and comply with the officer’s commands to get on the ground. It also reportedly maintains that Lemp refused to comply with the officer’s commands and proceeded towards an interior bedroom door where other officers were located.

According to the Lemp family attorneys, SWAT officers shot Lemp multiple times. They also reported that an eyewitness “told investigators that police never made verbal commands upon either her or Duncan until after Duncan was shot and lay bleeding on the floor. Multiple eyewitnesses told investigators that the police only forced entry into the home after Duncan was shot. According to those eyewitnesses, the police had no contract with any family members until after Duncan was shot.”

The MCPD statement said Lemp was out of bed and standing “directly in front of the interior bedroom door” holding a rifle “he slept with” each night as officers “made entry into the bedroom.”

Judicial Watch filed the lawsuit in the Montgomery County Circuit Court after the Montgomery County Police Department failed to respond to a June 18 PIA request (Judicial Watch v. Montgomery County Police Department (No. V482964)). Judicial Watch seeks:

All body-worn camera videos relating to the raid on, and resulting death of, Duncan Socrates Lemp by a Montgomery County Police SWAT team on March 12, 2020 at Mr. Lemp’s home in Potomac, Maryland.

“Given the vastly differing accounts of what happened, the Montgomery County Police Department needs to release all body-cam footage from the SWAT team raid on and shooting of Duncan Lemp,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “Withholding basic public information about a police shooting undermines public confidence in law enforcement.”

SILVER SPRING, Md. – A Maryland man who was shot and killed by a police officer was asleep in his bedroom when police opened fire from outside his house, an attorney for the 21-year-old man’s family said Friday. The man’s girlfriend was also wounded.

The Montgomery County Police Department said in a news release Friday that Duncan Socrates Lemp “confronted” police and was shot by one of the officers early Thursday. Rene Sandler, an attorney for Lemp’s relatives, said an eyewitness gave a “completely contrary” account of the shooting. She said police could have “absolutely no justification” for shooting Lemp based on what she has heard about the circumstances.

“The facts as I understand them from eyewitnesses are incredibly concerning,” she told The Associated Press.

The warrant that police obtained to search the Potomac home Lemp shared with his parents and 19-year-old brother doesn’t mention any “imminent threat” to law enforcement or the public, Lemp’s relatives said in a statement released Friday by their lawyers. Nobody in the house that morning had a criminal record, the statement adds.

“Any attempt by the police to shift responsibility onto Duncan or his family, who were sleeping when the police fired shots into their home, is not supported by the facts,” the statement says.

A police department spokesman didn’t immediately respond to the statements by the family or their lawyer.

The department’s news release on Friday says tactical unit members were serving a “high-risk” search warrant around 4:30 a.m. when one of the unit’s officers fatally shot Lemp. Police detectives recovered three rifles and two handguns from the home. Lemp was prohibited from possessing firearms, police said.

“Detectives were following up on a complaint from the public that Lemp, though prohibited, was in possession of firearms,” the release says without elaborating.

Sandler said the family believes police fired gunshots, not a flashbang or other projectile, from outside the home, including through Lemp’s bedroom window, while he and his girlfriend were sleeping. Nobody in the home heard any warnings or commands before police opened fire, she said.

“There is no warrant or other justification that would ever allow for that unless there is an imminent threat, which there was not,” Sandler said.

The police department’s news release says the “facts and circumstances of the encounter” are still under investigation. Prosecutors from neighboring Howard County will review the evidence at the conclusion of the investigation.

“An established agreement between the Montgomery County State’s Attorney’s Office and the Howard County State’s Attorney’s Office stipulates that when an officer-involved shooting involving injury or death occurs in one county, the other county’s State’s Attorney’s Office will review the event,” police said.

Lemp was Caucasian, according to Sandler. She did not know the race of the unidentified officer involved in the shooting because she said the officers were wearing masks. The officer was placed on administrative leave, a standard procedure after police shootings.

Sandler said Lemp’s grief-stricken family is traumatized. Their statement says they intend to “hold each and every person responsible for his death.”

“We believe that the body camera footage and other forensic evidence from this event will support what Duncan’s family already knows, that he was murdered,” the statement says.

Lemp worked as a software developer and was trying to raise money for a startup company, according to friends and co-workers.

“He was a talented, smart guy. Super nice. Didn’t deserve to get shot,” said Samuel Reid, whose Canadian software company employed Lemp as an independent contractor.

Tsolmondorj Natsagdorj, 24, of Fairfax, Virginia, said he met Lemp in 2016 and bonded with him over their shared interest in cryptocurrency. They also talked about politics. He described Lemp as a libertarian who frequented the 4chan and Reddit message boards, sites popular with internet trolls.

“Duncan was a young guy with a bright future as an entrepreneur,” Natsagdorj said. “He was working on things to change the world.”

On social media accounts that friends said belonged to him, Lemp’s username was “YungQuant.” On an internet forum called “My Militia,” someone who identified himself as Duncan Lemp, of Potomac, and posted under the username “yungquant” said he was “an active III%’r and looking for local members & recruits.” That’s an apparent reference to the Three Percenters, a wing of the militia movement. The group’s logo, the Roman numeral “III,” has become popular with anti-government extremists, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

On his Instagram account, Lemp recently posted a photograph that depicts two people holding up rifles and included the term “boogaloo,” slang used by militia members and other extremists to describe a future civil war in the U.S.

Friends said they never heard Lemp espouse any anti-government rhetoric. Sandler said Lemp was not a part of any anti-government or militia-type group.

“He was pro-America and supported wholeheartedly all the protections of the Constitution,” she said.

https://www.clickondetroit.com/news/2020/03/13/lawyer-man-asleep-when-police-fired-on-house-killing-him/

Maryland SWAT Team Serving Red Flag Warrant Shoot, Kill 21-Year-Old Man Asleep In His Bed

Potomac, MD–Duncan Lemp was asleep in his bed early Thursday morning when a SWAT team outside his house opened fire at their home.  Lemp’s family reports that the 21-year-old was killed in his sleep, and never got out of bed.  His girlfriend next to him was injured as well, but is expected to recover.

The Montgomery County Police Department had a warrant to search the home that Lemp, his parents and his younger brother lived.  Police reported that they “received a citizen complaint that Lemp possessed guns even though he was prohibited from doing so.”

This prompted a Special Operations Division Tactical Unit came to Lemp’s home in the 12200 block of St. James Road.  They arrived to serve the “high-risk” search warrant at 4:30 am.  This type of warrant is often called a ‘no-knock raid’ as officers are not required to knock or announce themselves.

Lemp’s family lawyer, Renee Sandler, met with  the press before the Police held their press conference on Friday and she expressed grave concern about what Lemp’s family claims was basically murder.  Sandler said that there is “absolutely no justification” for what happened.  She went on to say, “The facts as I understand them from eyewitnesses are incredibly concerning,” she told The Associated Press.  She went on: “Any attempt by the police to shift responsibility onto Duncan or his family who were sleeping when the police fired shots into their home is not supported by the facts,”

Neither Lemp, his parents, or his brother have any criminal record, according to their lawyer.

The Facts According to Lemp’s Family:

  1.  The police fired bullets–not a flashbang or anything nonlethal–into the house while the family was sleeping inside.
  2. They fired through Lemp’s bedroom window, specifically, not just at the house in general.  This while he and his girlfriend were asleep.
  3. Nobody inside the house heard the team outside call out to issue any warnings or commands before the police began shooting.
  4. The police seized three rifles and two handguns from the home. The police released a statement later on Thursday said that Lemp was not allowed to own a firearm, but there is no word on who owned the guns that were confiscated, since Lemp lived with his parents.   The statement from police also said that SWAT team was serving a “high-risk” search warrant related to “firearms offenses.”  They didn’t call it a Red Flag or ERPO warrant, however.

This all begs the question of why this warrant HAD to be served at 4:30 am.

The Police report said that the officer who shot Lemp is on administrative leave–their normal protocol after an officer-involved shooting.  They continued, “The facts and circumstances of the encounter are still being investigated by (police) detectives.”

Meanwhile, Lemp’s family attorney said that they mean  to “hold each and every person responsible for his death.”  “We believe that the body camera footage and other forensic evidence from this event will support what Duncan’s family already knows, that he was murdered,” the family’s statement says.

What prompted the police to be at Lemp’s house at 4:30 am serving a ‘firearms related’ warrant but NOT a red flag?  Was it a Red Flag and they just don’t want to call it that?  We don’t know yet.

But we know a few things about Lemp from friends who were interviewed and from his social  media accounts.

Lemp was a software engineer who was interested in cryptocurrency and professed to be a libertarian to his friends.  According to his friends and a cursory online search, Lemp’s social media handle on sites like 4chan and Reddit was “YungQuant”.  One online forum called “My Militia” has a member who identified himself as Duncan Lemp, of Potomac, and posted under the username “yungquant.”  That user said he was “an active III%’r and looking for local members & recruits” as of September of 2019.

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On his Instagram account, Lemp had recently posted a photograph that depicts two people holding up rifles and included the term “boogaloo.”   Considering half the internet was making jokes about a ‘boogaloo’ in January, that’s hardly disturbing to us.

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In fact, Lemp’s friends said he was far from anti-government. The family lawyer said, “He was pro-America and supported wholeheartedly all the protections of the Constitution,” she said.

This Story Had Better Be Convincing

There had better be a damn fine explanation for what happened here.  Gun owners haven’t forgotten that Maryland has already killed one gun owner while serving a Red Flag ERPO warrant in the past.  And while we’re the first to sing the praises of police and law enforcement when they defend the Constitution and our rights in the course of doing their job, it seems like these 4:30 am gun confiscation warrants are a recipe for disaster.

https://www.secondamendmentdaily.com/2020/03/maryland-swat-team-serving-warrant-shoot-kill-21-year-old-man-asleep-in-his-bed/

Capitalism Brings Paradise – Number of Ultrawealthy People Rises Dramatically Across the Globe – .003 % of World’s Population Live A Life of Luxury (Frank Knight Agency) 6 March 2020

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A report published on Wednesday, 4 March 2020,  by the UK-based Knight Frank consulting agency shows that the number of individuals worth more than $30 million grew internationally by six percent in 2019 to 513,244 and is expected to expand by another 27 percent by 2024 to nearly 650,000 people.

Boasting about the increasing fortunes of the world’s ultrawealthiest people, Knight Frank says The Wealth Report 2020 “takes an in-depth look at the most exciting opportunities in investment and luxury lifestyle, from the move towards sustainability in property and transport to the world’s top cities, medical advances and designer handbags.”

The bumper year for the so-called ultrahigh net-worth individuals (UHNWI)—people with assets of $30 million or more—is a focus of the 108-page Knight Frank report. The country with the largest number of UHNWI is the United States with a total of 240,575, which is an increase of 13,443 from the previous year.

In the top 10 UHNWI countries of the world after the US are China (61,587), Germany (23,078), France (18,776), Japan (17,013), UK (14,367), Italy (10,701), Canada (9,325), Russia (8,924) and Switzerland (8,395). 

While the total number of ultrawealthy individuals is concentrated in the capitalist imperialist centers of North America (249,900) and Europe (110,846), the Knight Frank data shows that the areas of the world with the fastest growth of UHNWI are in Asia, Africa and Australasia.

(A report from 2018 https://youtu.be/iwS3p63kjBM or https://www.hooktube.com/watch?v=iwS3p63kjBM&feature=emb_title) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwS3p63kjBM&feature=emb_title

As the report states, “Asia is quickly closing the gap on Europe, and our figures predict that by

2024 it will be the world’s second largest wealth hub, with forecast five-year growth of 44 percent. However, even following this heady rise Asia’s UHNWI cohort will still only be half the size of North America’s, which is forecast to grow by 22 percent over the same period.”

Among the countries with the most rapid projected growth of the superrich over the next five years are India (77 percent), Egypt (66 percent), Vietnam (64 percent), China (58 percent), Indonesia (57 percent), Tanzania (54 percent), Sweden (47 percent), Romania (42 percent), New Zealand (37 percent) and Malaysia (35 percent).

Whisk Liam BaileyLiam Bailey, Knight Frank’s global head of research, was giddy about the expanding number of superrich in the former colonial world. “It’s exciting to see how wealth is developing across Asia, and with the number of ultrawealthy in India, Vietnam, China and Malaysia outpacing many other markets over the next five years,” he said. “It will be interesting to see how this impacts the global property market.”

According to World Bank data, the percentage of the populations of India, Vietnam, China and Malaysia living on less than $5.50 per day is 87 percent, 29 percent, 27 percent and 2.7 percent respectively.

Although the Knight Frank report studiously avoids the question of just exactly how much wealth the global UHNWI control—as well as the skyrocketing wealth inequality on a world scale— Investopia reports that the ultrawealthy “constitute only .003 percent of the world’s total population, they hold approximately 13 percent of the world’s total wealth.”

With total global wealth in 2019 estimated at $360.6 trillion, this means that the total wealth of the UHNWI is $46.9 trillion, or an average of $91.3 million per UHNWI. In other words, the average wealth of a UHNWI is 1,289 times that of the global average net worth of $70,845 (Credit Suisse, October 2019).

The Knight Frank report points out that the wealth of the superrich has continued to climb even though the economic and political environments have been unstable. The report says, “Economically, 2019 was outwardly a tumultuous year, with the International Monetary Fund reducing its forecast for global GDP growth from 3.5 percent in January 2019 to just 2.9 percent in January 2020—a ten-year low.”

The report explains that the UHNWI have partially managed by moving their assets around, “Heightened global geopolitical uncertainty contributed to a rise in the value of ‘safe haven’ assets: gold hit a six-year high in September and, by the end of 2019, prices were some 16 percent higher than they had been 12 months previously.”

Clearly, growth in real estate and stock market values over the past year has played a significant role in the increased number of superrich. As the report says, “According to our Attitudes Survey, on average 23 percent of UHNWI investment portfolios are made up of equities [company shares], meaning that their performance makes a large contribution to rising wealth. Residential property also accounts for a large proportion of total UHNWI wealth—almost a third, according to the Attitudes Survey.

The investment allocation of the UHNWI for 2019 is spread across property investment (27 percent), equities (23 percent), bonds (17 percent), cash (11 percent), private equity (eight percent), collectibles (five percent), gold and precious metals (three percent) and cryptocurrencies (one percent), such as Bitcoin.

More than half of the Knight Frank report deals the lifestyles and attitudes of the superrich. Among these are where they like to live, through the Prime International Residential Index, where they invest in real estate, where they give money and the types of things that they collect.

The last of these sheds light on the priorities of and luxurious lifestyles of the superrich.

whiskey 2In a section of the report called “Objects of Desire,” Knight Frank reviews that the UHNWI like to collect classic cars, wine, art, whiskey and colored diamonds. Here the report provides photos of the items purchased and for how much, although the names of the buyers are not mentioned.

In one instance, a collection of Hanyu Ichiru Malt Full Card Series whiskey was sold by Bonhams Auction Company in London for $7.2 million. In another example, a 1994 McLaren F1 LM supercar was auctioned by Sotheby’s at the Monterey sales in

whiskeyAugust 2019 for $19.8 million. And in December, a series of original drawings by John James Audubon published between 1827-1838 entitled, “The Birds of America,” was sold by Sotheby’s for $6.4 million.

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A section of the report called, “It’s in the bag,” is devoted to the subject of handbag collecting by the superwealthy. The report says, “Handbags are increasingly being seen as an investment class in their own right, as well as highly desirable fashion accessories.” Among the handbags featured are Hermès styles The Kelly (auctioned for $241,000), The Constance (auctioned for $89,000) and The Birkin (auctioned for $386,000), all made of Himalaya Niloticus Crocodile with gold hardware.

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Julia Kovaljova with part of her Hermès handbag collection

https://archive.is/7o0j9

See Also: Attic Capital -Knight Frank Luxury Index – What Is It?by https://atticcapital.com/knight-frank-luxury-index-what-is-it/

Russian Vloger – Pharmacist With Chemist Husband – Dumps ‘Dry Ice’ into Birthday Party Pool – Three Dead – 28 Feb 2020

Audio of Article – Mp3

Three people have died and more are in hospital after a birthday surprise at a Moscow party had unforeseen consequences. Video shows dry ice being poured into a pool for effect, inadvertently creating a carbon dioxide gas chamber.  People breathing in the air full of carbon dioxide could not get enough oxygen and asphyxiated.
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The incident occurred at a Moscow sauna late on Friday, 28 February 2020,  Ekaterina Didenko, an Instagram blogger with over a million subscribers, was celebrating her 29th birthday with her family and friends.

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Yekaterina Didenko is a certified pharmacist, blogging about pharmacies and drugs. Ms Didenko is known for posting tips about how to save money on pharmaceutical products on her Instagram page. She has a million followers.

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Valentin Didenko, the blogger’s husband, has a higher education technical education.  Valentin presented the guest at the Moscow sauna with protective suits and dust masks and googles and invited them to a special event in a pool with water being filled with ‘dry ice’ which is soldid carbon dioxide.  When vehicles produce carbon dioxide exhaust on city streets it is called ‘pollution.’

dry ice

The thick mist was supposed to be a visual treat to take photos and feature on Instragram and other social media.

vlogger 2The video file shows the people at the party crowding around the pool wearing ineffective ‘protective’ suits that were more theatrical than effective.  Valentin pours the ‘dry ice’ carbon dioxide into the water and a heavy mist is visible.

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Someone reads safety instructions in a mocking tone warning that ‘dry ice’ is a hazardous substance.

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Valentin then jumps into the pool and disappears beneath the mist to come up again briefly and then goes down below the mist about ten feet away from the crowd at the edge of the pool.

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“He’s dead; he’s not with us anymore,” one person says joking and everyone laughs.  Valentin was dead.

vlogger 3

vlogger 5It remains unclear where Valentin procured such a large amount of dry ice – and some earlier Instagram posts by Didenko suggested that he might have cooked it himself.   Questions have been raised on social media as to whether the two educated people should have known better than to play with dry ice.

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Didenko is now a 29 year old widow with two children to raise without a father.  She does have her online notoriety to compensate for her loss and that lonely feeling.

https://archive.is/WSJSd

co2

Vlogger

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The UK BBC also covered the story – https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-51680049

The BBC report claims that the water in the sauna was too hot so the party goers put ‘dry ice’ in the water to cool it down.  Does that sound like what saunas do when they want to cool water down?  Wouldn’t a sauna have both hot and cold water?  Other media, like the woman’s Instragram and other social media, show the couple making ‘dry ice’ in the days before the birthday party at the sauna.  The couple dumps the dry ice into the water as a planned event.  That’s why people have on the ineffective plastic suits and googles.  But, commenters online have demanded a ‘real source’ after seeing the video and pictures, and narrative I have provided in this blog post.  They do not trust the BBC – who clearly got the story wrong. 

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https://archive.ph/WSJSd