Things I don’t understand

The Washington Post: Trump administration sends letter withdrawing U.S. from World Health Organization over coronavirus response.

“The Trump administration has sent a letter to the United Nations withdrawing the United States from the World Health Organization over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic, a dramatic move that could reshape public health diplomacy.
The notice of withdrawal was delivered to United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres, said a senior administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the letter has not been made public. Under the terms of a joint resolution passed by Congress in 1948, the United States must give a year’s notice in writing and pay its debts to the agency in order to leave.
It is not clear whether the president can pull the United States out of the organization and withdraw funding without Congress. When Trump first threatened to withdraw, Democratic lawmakers argued that doing so would be illegal and vowed to push back.”

The Washington Post: A high-risk Florida teen who died from covid-19 attended a huge church party, then was given hydroxychloroquine by her parents, report says.

“A medical examiner’s report recently made public, however, has raised questions about Carsyn’s case. The Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner found that the immunocompromised teen went to a large church party with roughly 100 other children where she did not wear a mask and social distancing was not enforced. Then, after getting sick, nearly a week passed before she was taken to the hospital, and during that time her parents gave her hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malarial drug touted by President Trump that the Food and Drug Administration has issued warnings about, saying usage could cause potentially deadly heart rhythm problems.
Carsyn’s case, which gained renewed interest on Sunday after it was publicized by Florida data scientist Rebekah Jones, drew fierce backlash from critics, including a number of medical professionals, who condemned the actions taken by the teen’s family in the weeks before her death.”

“Trump hat einen unglaublichen Machtinstinkt.”

Deutsche Welle: Philosoph Hösle: Trump zeigt “klassische Strategie eines Diktators”. “Für den Philosophen Vittorio Hösle steht das transatlantische Verhältnis an einem Scheideweg. Im Falle einer Wiederwahl von US-Präsident Trump hält er ein Auseinanderfallen für möglich.”

Falls Trump als Präsident wiedergewählt wird…
…wird es um die Einheit des Westens noch viel schlimmer stehen als jetzt schon. Aus dem Bolton-Bericht wissen wir, dass Trump eigentlich aus der NATO austreten wollte. Und im Falle seiner Wiederwahl würde er jede weitere Gelegenheit nutzen, die europäischen Länder zu demütigen. In seinem Weltbild spielt Europa kaum eine Rolle. Er hat im Grunde das Weltbild eines Mobsters, eines Clanchefs, der die Welt in Einflusssphären einteilt nach dem Motto “Dieser Teil der Stadt ist für meine Drogenhändler, der andere ist für dich”. Ansonsten hat er keinerlei Verständnis für Verfassung oder Gewaltenteilung. Das verachtet er alles. Deshalb: Wenn er wiedergewählt wird, wird es noch düsterer werden.”

“Vittorio Hösle, am 25. Juni 1960 als Sohn einer italienischer Mutter und eines deutschen Vaters in Mailand geboren, lehrt seit rund 20 Jahren an der University of Notre Dame im US.Bundesstaat Indiana.Zuvor war er an Universitäten in Deutschland und der Schweiz tätig und leitete das Forschungsinstitut für Philosophie in Hannover. Hösle ist Beiratsmitglied im “Komitee für eine Demokratische UNO“. Papst Franziskus berief ihn 2013 in die Päpstliche Akademie der Sozialwissenschaften.”

“Why were so many predators getting away with it? And what would it take to stop them?”

The New York Times: The Rape Kit’s Secret History. “This is the story of the woman who forced the police to start treating sexual assault like a crime.” By Pagan Kennedy.

“How could a tool as potentially powerful as the rape kit have come into existence in the first place? For nearly two decades, I’d been reporting on inventors, breakthroughs and the ways that new technologies can bring about social change. It seemed to me that the rape-kit system was an invention like no other. Can you think of any other technology designed to hold men accountable for brutalizing women?

As soon as I began to investigate the rape kit’s origins, however, I stumbled across a mystery. Most sources credited a Chicago police sergeant, Louis Vitullo, with developing the kit in the 1970s. But a few described the invention as a collaboration between Mr. Vitullo and an activist, Martha Goddard. Where was the truth? As so often happens in stories about rape, I found myself wondering whom to believe.

[…]

The rape-kit idea was presented to the public as a collaboration between the state attorney’s office and the police department, with men running both sides… and little credit given to the women who had pushed for reform. Ms. Goddard agreed to this […] because she saw that it was the only way to make the rape kit happen.”