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COVID in the Rear-View Mirror (Opinion)

At the conclusion of the COVID-19 pandemic, when the normal rhythm of live is restored, when we cease to view our neighbors next door and strangers on the street as potential harbingers of disease, each of us needs to do our own analysis of what went wrong with the handling of this “national crisis”.

This is the sort of backward glancing and retrospection that will, hopefully, make us wary of institutional experts and organizations with hidden agendas.

Perhaps the greatest problem with the COVID-19 scare was its politicization and prioritizing of profits over patients. Only now are certain facts coming to light that are causing people to doubt the competence and/or truthfulness of their leaders and the institutions they once respected.

Liberal comedian Bill Maher surprised his viewers earlier this year with a cynical monologue about the “scared straight” tactics used by the medical establishment, the media and the government to compel people to comply with their recommendations. “The more they can get you to stay inside and watch their panic porn … the higher their ratings”, Maher asserted. “Sunshine is the best disinfectant and Vitamin D is the key to a robust immune system”.

Maher continued his diatribe taking aim at the misinformation surrounding hospitalization rates, mortality rates among children and the paranoia surrounding the transmission of the disease by nondisinfected surfaces.
In addition, earlier this year, new research brought to light some interesting revelations. In the January, 2021 issue of The American Journal of Medicine, the efficacy of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) and zinc (a known inhibitor of coronavirus replication) was touted as an early treatment for COVID-19 that could both reduce hospitalizations and death.

HCQ is an inexpensive antimalarial drug with a long history of use for the treatment of Lupus and Rheumatoid arthritis but because it didn’t offer the same massive payouts to drug companies as the new antivirals and vaccines, it was largely ignored. This sort of deliberate neglect of existing, potentially life-saving treatments is, at the very least, a betrayal of the public trust.

According to Dr. Harvey A. Risch, professor of epidemiology at the Yale School of Public Health, “Physicians who have been using these medications (HCQ, and azithromycin, a common antibiotic) during the pandemic in the face of widespread skepticism have been truly heroic. They have done what the science shows is best for their patients, often at great personal risk”.

The herculean struggles of four brilliant clinician-researchers, headed by Dr. Paul Marik and his protégé Dr. Pierre Kory, and their passionate advocacy for the use of Ivermectin, an inexpensive, FDA approved generic anti-parasitic drug as both an effective prophylaxis and successful treatment for COVID-19, has garnered praise from peer reviewers, doctors, nurses, scientists, health philanthropists and civil rights activists around the world. Not only did studies confirm that Ivermectin decimated the coronavirus in vitro within 48 hours, it was also demonstrated to be effective in human beings.

According to Dr. Kory, the data from 27 studies, 16 of them randomized controlled trials, demonstrated that people infected with COVID-19 were far more likely to recover quickly at home when administered Ivermectin. Despite the evidence of the efficacy of Ivermectin, its advocates were systematically censored and demonized on social media platforms. Dr. Hector Carvallo from Argentina, an expert in prophylactic studies, lamented to Marik and his colleagues that their campaign to mainstream this life-saving therapy for the treatment of COVID-19 had “affected the most sensitive organ on humans: the wallet…”

In a commentary dated November 18, 2020, Dr. Elizabeth Lee Vliet summaries the pivotal lessons learned from the pandemic – COVID-19 is not a death sentence for people without co-morbidities and early treatment with antivirals, vitamins, minerals, immune boosters, fresh air and sunshine at the first sign of symptoms is critical. According Dr. Vliet, “The failed Fauci model (of) telling patients to go home, self-quarantine, do nothing, and go to the ER if they get sicker – exacerbated by the FDA statements discouraging HCQ use (and other antivirals) - has caused the US COVID death rate to be in the world’s top ten”.

As free-thinking Americans, we must always maintain a healthy skepticism about the motives of big government and the corporations it enables. Due to the payments they receive from Big Pharma and vaccine manufacturers, significant financial conflicts exist with the National Institutes for Health, the CDC and the FDA. Their objectivity has been so compromised by the fallout from this crisis, it is hard to imagine how these institutions can ever fully regain the trust of the people they allegedly serve.

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High pressure will continue to provide unseasonably hot temperatures through Tuesday with areas of wildfire smoke and haze and a chance of afternoon thunderstorms, according to the National Weather Service in Reno.

CARSON CITY — Commercial collectors have plucked nearly half a million reptiles off the Nevada desert landscape in the last three decades.

A 37-year-old Carson City man was arrested early Monday morning for felony suspicion of preventing a victim from calling 911 and misdemeanor suspicion of domestic battery, a Carson City sheriff’s deputy said.

The Carson Area Chapter of the Vietnam Veterans of America will be sponsoring a 2017 POW/MIA Recognition Day Ceremony on Friday, Sept. 15th at the Nevada Veteran's Memorial Wall on the Nevada Capitol Grounds in Carson City.

On September 15, 2017 the annual Nevada bear hunt season opens, and this year 45 hunters have been issued tags to participate in the season that lasts until Dec. 1, or until the quota of 20 black bears has been met, according to the Nevada Department of Wildlife. The quota in 2016 was 41 bears.

Firefighters made continued progress on the Slinkard Fire burning west of Topaz, reaching 49 percent containment by Monday morning, according to the Bureau of Land Management.

Labor Day commemorates the men and women whose sweat made this such a great country and has been a national holiday since 1894. Celebrate this unofficial end-of-summer with a trip to the lake, a backyard bar-be-que, the parade in Virginia City, or one of the many fun events going on around town. Head over to St. Peter’s Episcopal Church for their annual Inter-faith Potluck Picnic and don’t forget to bring some silverware and something yummy to share.

MONDAY: Labor Day

University of Nevada Cooperative Extension presents a free Safety Day event for children and their families. The event, held in partnership with local businesses, organizations and agencies, is 8 a.m.-noon, Saturday, Sept. 9, at Mills Park, 111 E. William St. in Carson City.

Here is the Carson City area road report for the week of Sept. 4-10, 2017: Road closures are expected at the following locations due to road/utility work, so please follow detours:

Carson City Fire Department and sheriff's deputies were called early Sunday evening to an accident involving a skateboarder in the 1800 block of North Carson Street.

A pair of Carson city women were arrested Friday afternoon at 1:45 p.m. in the 1000 block of Woodside Drive for felony possession of methamphetamine, a Carson City Sheriff's deputy said.

BLACK ROCK CITY, Nev. — A man who broke through a safety perimeter and ran into a fire at Burning Man Saturday night has died, according to Nevada sheriff's officials.

The Slinkard Fire burning in the Topaz area since Tuesday has grown to more than 9,000 acres as of Sunday morning with 35 percent containment, according to Bureau of Land Management Incident Command. Highway 395 remains open.

The great thing about Labor Day weekend is that it just keeps going. The Best in the West Rib Cook-off offers up family fun, live music, and plenty of bar-be-qued delights all the way through Monday. For those with younger kids, consider a day at Mills Park. This is the last weekend for summertime train rides through the cottonwoods. Join Muscle Powered at Silver Saddle Ranch by the Carson River for a bike or hike this morning. Bring water and a camera, you never know what wildlife will make an appearance.

SUNDAY:

Carson City/Storey County, NV – University of Nevada Cooperative Extension’s fall Grow Your Own, Nevada! Program presents eight classes statewide to help Nevadans get on the path to more sustainable, local, healthy living by growing and preserving more of their own food.

DAYTON — On Saturday, Sept. 9, more than a dozen communities throughout Nevada are participating in the annual Walk in Memory — Walk for Hope event. The goal of the event is to increase awareness of the effects suicide has on our nation and state, and to remember those who have been lost to suicide.

UPDATE SUNDAY, 9:10AM: A man who was stabbed Saturday evening and sustained a moderate to serious knife wound was flown to the trauma ward at a Reno hospital. His condition is unknown at this time. He is expected to live. It is unknown at this time if he remains in the hospital. No arrests have been made and no charges have been filed, said Carson City Sheriff's Office Sgt. Nate Brehm. The matter remains under investigation.

The days of summer flew by, and soon it will be fall again. Life and its events are relentlessly changing as though time were speeding up. Here at CHS, this new school year brings a list of new students, new clubs, and new activities to the desk and table of CHS teachers and students, and because time passes so quickly when busy, it is easy to become stressed with anxiety and succumb to its temptations.

The Young Dubliners and Cíana brought down the house Saturday night on the Minnesota Street Stage at the Brewery Arts Center Performance Hall parking lot, bringing the 2017 Levitt AMP Carson City Summer Concert Series to a close.

Eric Church wraps up the Summer Concert Series at Harveys Lake Tahoe Outdoor Arena in Stateline, Nev., on Saturday, Sept. 2, 2017.

An assortment of hunting breeds have gathered at Fuji Park in South Carson City to participate in the Battle Born Ratacular Barn Hunt, presented by Revolution Dog Sports.

A 48 year-old Carson City woman was taken into custody Friday night at 7:25 p.m. in the 2000 block of College Parkway after allegedly injuring her boyfriend with a kitchen knife, a Carson City Sheriff's deputy said.

UPDATE 11:30AM: Acccording to the National Wildfire Coordinating Group web site provided by the Sierra Front Interagency Dispatch Center, the Slinkard Fire has officially burned more than 7,880 acres and is currently about 20 percent contained at this hour.
More than 600 firefighting personnel are on scene, including 15 crews, four helicopters, 56 engines, two bulldozers, and 11 water tenders.
U.S. Highway 395 is reported to be open in both directions. However, both the Nevada and California highway patrols remain on scene to monitor the situation.
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The Slinkard Fire near Topaz Lake has grown to about 9,000 acres in size, but firefighters have achieved at least 10 percent containment on the blaze as of about 9 a.m. Saturday morning, according updated reports from all three major television news stations in Reno.

Carson Tahoe Health is pleased to announce that its president and chief executive officer, Ed Epperson, has been honored with the prestigious Lifetime Achievement
Award as part of Nevada Business Magazine’s 2017 "Healthcare Heroes."

Those getting ready to turn 65 years of age will have the opportunity to learn from local experts at the "ABCs of Medicare" seminar held Wednesday, Sept. 13 at 10 a.m. at 911 Topsy Lane, Suite 230 in South Carson City.

I recently visited Port Gamble, Washington’s dahlia gardens.

Dahlias are gorgeous and are diverse in color, shape and size. I saw ruffled dahlias the color of blazing sunsets with tangerine outer edges and deep yellow centers.

CARSON CITY — The Nevada Guard is set to host a memorial run/walk on Wednesday, Sept. 6, to commemorate the victims of the International House of Pancakes shooting that occurred in 2011.

Carson City Fire Department and sheriff's deputies were called Friday afternoon to a single vehicle rollover in the area of Carson River Road and Camballeria Drive.

CARSON CITY — The crews aboard two Nevada Army Guard UH-60L Black Hawk helicopters will begin firefighting efforts Friday at the Slinkard Fire at Topaz Lake near the Nevada and California state border.

On Tuesday, Sept. 5, Chili's Bar and Grill will donate 100 percent of profits from its restaurants nationwide, including Carson City, to the relief efforts of those affected by Hurricane Harvey.