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Doctors plead with Americans to take virus surge seriously

Health care workers are posting urgent appeals on social media. About 1 in 323 Americans tested positive in the past week. Catch up on the latest.

— NYT: Top Stories

Fauci cautions ‘gradual return’ to normalcy by ‘second, third’ quarter 2021.

The number of vaccine doses available by the end of the year will be much lower than expected as at least two doses are required per treatment.

— FOX News

As restrictions return, U.S. workers see no safety net. With new virus rules, workers are worried about wages. President Trump’s virus team is blocked from working with President-elect Joe Biden’s.

— NYT: Top Stories

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2020 Election live updates: In campaign’s final weekend, both candidates focus on Pennsylvania

President Trump plans four stops in Pennsylvania on Saturday, and Joe Biden will give a speech in Philadelphia on Sunday.

The President will hold four rallies across Pennsylvania on Saturday and his wife, Melania, will host a fifth event in the swing state, as both the president and his Democratic challenger, Joseph R. Biden Jr., zero in on what could be a linchpin in the race for the White House.

Mr. Trump prevailed in Pennsylvania in 2016 by less than 45,000 votes, and his itinerary on Saturday suggests some of the key demographic and geographic ingredients that he hopes to combine to create another surprise victory.

His first stop is in suburban Bucks County, where Hillary Clinton prevailed in 2016 by less than one percentage point. He will hold two events outside the major media markets, in Reading and in tiny Montoursville (population around 4,400), as he seeks to drive up turnout among the white, working-class and rural voters who overwhelmingly supported him four years ago.

He will also campaign in Butler, in western Pennsylvania, where he hopes his unabashed pro-fracking message holds sway. Melania Trump, meanwhile, will appear in Luzerne County in northeastern Pennsylvania, a historically Democratic region that Mr. Trump flipped into the Republican column in 2016.

The Trumps will hardly have the state to themselves in the last days before Tuesday.

On Sunday, Mr. Biden will deliver one of his final speeches of the campaign in Philadelphia, the state’s biggest media market. And on Monday, both Mr. Biden and his running mate, Senator Kamala Harris of California, will “fan out across all four corners of the state” with their spouses on the last full day of campaigning before voters head to the polls, according to the Biden campaign.

Mr. Biden, who represented neighboring Delaware in the Senate for decades, has long considered Pennsylvania something of a second home state, given the media market overlap and his own often-cited roots in Scranton, where he was born. He delivered his campaign kickoff speech in Philadelphia in May 2019; coming full circle, his Sunday speech, which his campaign says will be about “bringing Americans together to address the crises facing the country,” will occur in the same city.

Mr. Trump will return to Pennsylvania on Monday for an event near Scranton, with other stops in North Carolina, Wisconsin and Michigan.

In 2016, Mr. Trump flipped three Rust Belt states that had been reliably Democratic by fewer than 80,000 votes in total: Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. And while polls have him trailing Mr. Biden in all three states, Pennsylvania has been the least Democratic-leaning in surveys this year, and its 20 Electoral College votes make it the biggest prize of the three.

— NYT: Top Stories

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International & World

Russian Opposition Leader Navalny leaves hospital after poisoning

Doctors treating Aleksei Navalny said he had been discharged after 32 days of treatment and could make a full recovery.

NYT: Melissa Eddy

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Art & Life

Advocacy groups: Legalize it! Tons of benefits

Recently, a group of more than 50 physicians called Doctors for Cannabis Regulation (DFCR) announced their presence and their purpose, endorsing marijuana for adult recreational use and public health benefits.

DFCR offers a break from the American Medical Association (AMA) stance on medical marijuana. Even though the AMA is the largest membership of doctors in the country, the smaller group, DFCR, is making an argument that legalizing marijuana does more good than harm.

Photo by Mike Theiler/AFP Here, holding a sign in front of the White House on April 2, Charles Schatz of Bel Air, Md., joins dozens of demonstrators, demanding the use of marijuana for medical cases.
Photo by Mike Theiler/AFP
Here, holding a sign in front of the White House on April 2, Charles Schatz of Bel Air, Md., joins dozens of demonstrators, demanding the use of marijuana for medical cases.

According to Christopher Ingraham in the Washington Post article, the DFCR cites “hundreds of thousands of annual marijuana arrests, racial and economic disparities in marijuana enforcement, and the role of prohibition in keeping marijuana prices high and lucrative to violent drug dealers…”

Ingraham notes that the physicians believe that allowing the legalization of marijuana and regulating it is the best way to avoid criminalization from illicit drug trade, to ensure public safety, and to combat the negative consequences of strict enforcement polices in certain disadvantaged communities.

At the federal level, the Senate Appropriations Committee also recently passed an amendment allowing doctors at the Veterans Health Administration, (VA), to use marijuana or cannabis to treat certain illnesses such as anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in their patients.

The drug is known to be beneficial for a wide array of illnesses such as pain, mental health issues, eyesight, seizures, respiratory illnesses, and even certain immune disorders.

However, there are some who oppose the use of the drug because of its addictive nature.

‘”You don’t have to be pro-marijuana to be opposed to it’s prohibition,”‘ said the founder and board president of DFCR, David L. Nathan.

Nathan addressed the facts that nine percent of adults who use the drug become dependent on it and that heavy uses in adolescents can damage the development of their brains.

Nevertheless, according to researchers, this drug is known to be less harmful to individuals and society than other legal common drugs such as alcohol and tobacco.