Anonymous ID: cf62ed Feb. 17, 2021, 6:50 a.m. No.12963386   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3593 >>4276 >>4517 >>4832

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9263061/Trump-gets-specially-painted-Air-Force-One-spirits-model-away-Mar-Lago.html

 

REVEALED: Trump took model of redesigned Air Force One from White House and has it on a coffee table at Mar-a-Lago

 

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said President Joe Biden 'has not spent a moment' thinking about Air Force One's color scheme

 

Trump ordered a renegotiation of contract for the next generation plane after he took office

 

Trump took a personal interest in the interior design of the plane and even wanted a 'more modern look' in its presidential bedroom

He put a model of the plane on a table in the Oval Office during his tenure

 

It was seen as he met with world leaders

 

The model has since been photographed at Mar-a-Lago where Trump now lives

 

It is now displayed on a coffee table in a lobby, Politico reports

Anonymous ID: cf62ed Feb. 17, 2021, 7 a.m. No.12963984   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4176 >>4276 >>4327 >>4832

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/covid-linked-syndrome-in-children-is-growing-and-cases-are-more-severe/ar-BB1dIDXq

 

Covid-Linked Syndrome in Children Is Growing and Cases Are More Severe

Pam Belluck 9 hrs ago

 

 

Fifteen-year-old Braden Wilson was frightened of Covid-19. He was careful to wear masks and only left his house, in Simi Valley, Calif., for things like orthodontist checkups and visits with his grandparents nearby.

 

But somehow, the virus found Braden. It wreaked ruthless damage in the form of an inflammatory syndrome that, for unknown reasons, strikes some young people, usually several weeks after infection by the coronavirus.

 

Doctors at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles put the teenager on a ventilator and a heart-lung bypass machine. But they could not stop his major organs from failing. On Jan. 5, “they officially said he was brain dead,” his mother, Amanda Wilson, recounted, sobbing. “My boy was gone.”

 

Doctors across the country have been seeing a striking increase in the number of young people with the condition Braden had, which is called Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children or MIS-C. Even more worrisome, they say, is that more patients are now very sick than during the first wave of cases, which alarmed doctors and parents around the world last spring.

 

“We’re now getting more of these MIS-C kids, but this time, it just seems that a higher percentage of them are really critically ill,” said Dr. Roberta DeBiasi, chief of infectious diseases at Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C. During the hospital’s first wave, about half the patients needed treatment in the intensive care unit, she said, but now 80 to 90 percent do.

 

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