Anonymous ID: 632abe Dec. 14, 2020, 7:30 p.m. No.12031908   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Kentucky man run over by car during Hanukkah celebration says driver used anti-Semitic slursA Kentucky man was run over on Saturday during a Hanukkah celebration, according to police and CBS affiliate WKYT. The victim told police the driver used anti-Semitic slurs before the attack.

 

Lexington police told CBS News the victim was standing near a curb during the menorah-lighting ceremony when a man in a dark-colored SUV pulled up next to him and the two exchanged words.

 

According to a Facebook post by the Chabad, the driver had nearly hit a volunteer film crew and the man intervened, stepping in between the driver and the Chabad house, where children were in the front room.

 

Tonight, as we were preparing to light the Menorah for the third night of Chanukah, a community member was assaulted…

 

Posted by Chabad of the Bluegrass on Saturday, December 12, 2020

Police say the driver then grabbed the man by the arm and accelerated the vehicle, dragging the victim. When the driver let go, the victim fell and hit his head, and the driver ran over the victim's leg before fleeing, police said.

 

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/rabbi-victim-insisted-menorah-lighting-continue-after-hanukkah-celebration-car-attack/

Anonymous ID: 632abe Dec. 14, 2020, 7:37 p.m. No.12032000   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2243 >>2370

==Nonprescription at-home coronavirus test gets FDA approval

The test is intended for use by anyone 18 years and older==T he Food and Drug Administration authorized the first over-the-counter, at-home coronavirus test kit for consumers on Wednesday. LabCorp’s Pixel COVID-19 Test Home Collection Kit is intended for use by anyone 18 years and older and allows people to self-collect a nasal swab sample at home and send it to LabCorp for testing. If the results are positive, or deemed invalid, the consumer receives a phone call from a health care provider. Negative results are developed via email or online portal.

 

This is the first kit for consumers to self-collect a nasal sample for COVID-19 in their home that does not require a prescription,” Jeff Shuren, director of the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said in a press release posted to the FDA website. “While many home collection kits can be prescribed with a simple online questionnaire, this newly authorized direct-to-consumer collection kit removes that step from the process, allowing anyone to collect their sample and send it to the lab for processing.”

 

https://www.foxnews.com/health/nonprescription-at-home-coronavirus-test-gets-fda-approval?yptr=yahoo