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White House Chief of Staff: US Will ‘Defeat the Virus’ but Can’t ‘Control It’

Questioning the Universe With Wonderment: ‘Philosopher Lecturing on the Orrery’

Science, with people believing that the truths it offers are absolute, has become a source from which many people gather their beliefs. The Age of Enlightenment was a philosophical catalyst in helping science gain a foothold over religion and faith, with some of the era eventually seeing them as outdated and even harmful modes of belief. Science is always advancing, however, and the scientific truth of yesterday—despite being thought of as absolute—is often overturned by new evidence tomorrow. As science continues to develop and evolve, is there a place for those things that exist outside the domain of science, such as religion and faith? Asking these questions makes me think of a scientific artist I loved as a young boy, Joseph Wright of Derby. As an adult, however, I find myself…

White House Chief of Staff: US Will ‘Defeat the Virus’ but Can’t ‘Control It’

White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, in clarifying remarks on Monday, said that the United States is “going to defeat the virus” but cannot “control it,” referring to the CCP virus.

On Sunday, Meadows was criticized by Democrats, including Joe Biden, for saying on CNN that “we are not going to control the pandemic … it’s a contagious virus just like the flu.”

In remarks to pool reporters the next day, he sought to offer more context about the battle against the virus. In the United States and Europe, cases are again on the rise, triggering lockdowns in some areas.

“We need to make sure that we have therapeutics and vaccines,” Meadows said, “we may need to make sure that when people get sick, that they have the kind of therapies that the president of the United States had.”

Meadows said that he has not himself taken one of the vaccines. “Then we can provide those emergency using authorizations; hopefully they’ll be coming in very short order,” he said.

The chief of staff on Sunday was also responding to questions about several staffers in Vice President Mike Pence’s office testing positive for the CCP virus. Pence’s chief of staff, Marc Short, and at least four others tested positive, while Pence and Second Lady Karen Pence tested negative.

Meadows told CNN that Pence would continue to campaign and carry out his duties as vice president.

“I spoke to the vice president last night at midnight and I can tell you that what he is doing is wearing a mask, socially distancing, and when he goes up to speak he will take the mask off and put it back on,” Meadows said. “He is wearing a mask as it relates to this particular thing because the doctors have advised him to do that.”

Biden, who has cast himself as the candidate who will be able to defeat the virus, criticized Meadows for his remarks.

“This wasn’t a slip by Meadows, it was a candid acknowledgment of what President Trump’s strategy has clearly been from the beginning of this crisis: to wave the white flag of defeat and hope that by ignoring it, the virus would simply go away. It hasn’t, and it won’t,” said Biden in a statement. Vice-presidential nominee Kamala Harris added to CNN on Sunday that Meadows’s comments are an admission of “defeat,” adding, “This is the greatest failure of any presidential administration in the history of America.”

On Sunday night, President Donald Trump told a crowd at a rally in New Hampshire that the United States is “rounding the turn” on the pandemic.

“We are coming around, we’re rounding the turn. We have the vaccines, we have everything. Even without the vaccines, we’re rounding the turn,” he said. “It’s going to be over.”

Focus News: White House Chief of Staff: US Will ‘Defeat the Virus’ but Can’t ‘Control It’

Popcorn and Inspiration: ‘High Noon’: A Moving Western About Standing Up for What’s Right

PG | 1h 25min | Drama, Thriller, Western | 30 July 1952 (USA) Similar to 1960’s “The Magnificent Seven,” director Fred Zinnemann’s “High Noon” (1952) is a Western about courage and standing up for what’s right, no matter the odds. And although this film shares that message, it doesn’t begin as dramatically as the later film does. “High Noon” starts off much more subtly, with shots of scruffy henchman Jack Colby (Lee Van Cleef) smoking a cigarette under a tree. Soon, he is joined by a couple of similar, devious-looking men, Jim Pierce (Robert Wilke) and Ben Miller (Sheb Wooley). The three men travel via horseback to a lone train station to await the noontime arrival of their leader, Frank Miller (Ian MacDonald). Not too far away is the dusty…