Tag: U.S.

  • Russia to build new space station, says ISS becoming obsolete

    Russia plans to build a new space station because the current International Space Station (ISS) will last only another decade at most, the head of the Russian space agency Roscosmos said on Monday.

    “It’s still unclear whether the new station will be international or national,’’ Roscosmos Chief Dmitry Rogozin said in comments carried by the Russian newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda.

    Rogozin said that the International Space Station (ISS) would be operable for another seven to 10 years.

    The ISS, with segments built by Russia and the U.S., has been in continuous use for the past two decades.

    The orbiting laboratory has been a collaboration of mostly U.S. and Russian crew members, tasked with conducting scientific research that would be impossible on Earth’s surface.

    It is a unique source of cooperation between these two rival powers.

    Rogozin did not provide a timeline for the construction of Russia’s new space station.

    He said the issue of whether it would host international crews would be decided in the near future.

    “The technical preparations are supposed to start now,’’ Rogozin said.

  • Coronavirus battle: China tells U.S. what to do

    Coronavirus battle: China tells U.S. what to do

    The U.S. should stop wasting time in its fight against the coronavirus and work with China to combat it, rather than spreading lies and attacking the country, the Chinese Government’s top diplomat, Wang Yi, said on Sunday.

    The Sino-U.S. ties have nosedived since the outbreak of the new coronavirus, with the administrations of President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping repeatedly trading barbs over issues related to the pandemic, especially the U.S. accusations of cover-ups and lack of transparency.

    The two top economies have also clashed over Hong Kong, human rights, trade and the U.S. support for Chinese-claimed Taiwan.

    State Councillor Wang, speaking at his annual news conference on the sidelines of China’s parliament, expressed his deep sympathies to the U.S. for the pandemic, where the death toll is expected to surpass 100,000 in the coming days, the highest number of any country.

    “Regretfully, in addition to the raging coronavirus, a political virus is also spreading in the U.S.

    “This political virus is using every opportunity to attack and smear China,’’ said Wang, who is also China’s Foreign Minister.

    “Some politicians have ignored the most basic facts and concocted too many lies about China and plotted too many conspiracies.’’

    “I want to say here: Don’t waste precious time any longer, and don’t ignore lives,’’ Wang said.

    “What China and the U.S. need to do the most is to first learn from each other and share their experience in fighting against the epidemic and help each country fight it.’’

    China and the U.S. also need to start coordinating macro policies for their respective economies and the world economy, he added.

    China remains prepared to work with the U.S. in the spirit of cooperation and mutual respect, Wang said, when asked if Sino-U.S. relations would further worsen.

    “China has always advocated that as the world’s largest developing country and the largest developed country, both of us bear a major responsibility for world peace and development,’’ he said.

    “China and the U.S. stand to gain from cooperation, and lose from confrontation.’’

    Last month, Missouri became the first U.S. state to sue the Chinese government over its handling of the coronavirus, saying China’s response to the outbreak that originated in the city of Wuhan brought devastating economic losses to the state.

    Wang said such lawsuits lacked any legal basis.

    “The China of today is not the China of a century ago, and nor is it the world,’’ he added.

    “If you want to infringe upon China’s sovereignty and dignity with indiscriminate litigation, and extort the fruits of the hard work of the Chinese people, I am afraid this is a daydream and you’ll only humiliate yourself.’’

    Wang also offered his strong support for the World Health Organisation (WHO) and its chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, frequent targets of the U.S. criticism.

    “To support the WHO is to support saving lives.

    “This is the choice any country with a conscience should make,’’ he said.

    Trump, who has accused the agency of being “China centric”, has threatened to permanently halt funding to the WHO and to reconsider his country’s membership of the agency.

  • Huawei tackles US govt. over rule changes

    Huawei has opposed the amendments made by the US Department of Commerce to its foreign direct product rule that seem to target Huawei specifically.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the US government had in May 2019 added Huawei to the Entity List and had continued to blacklist the technology company, especially as the race for 5G networks thicken.

    Recently, the US government made amendments to its foreign direct product rule, with Huawei saying the decision was arbitrary and pernicious, and that it threatens to undermine the entire industry worldwide.

    In a statement, Huawei said it is undertaking a comprehensive examination of the new rule, saying that it’s business will inevitably be affected by the new rule.

    The statement reads: Huawei categorically opposes the amendments made by the US Department of Commerce to its foreign direct product rule that target Huawei specifically.

    “The US government added Huawei to the Entity List on May 16, 2019 without justification. Since that time, and despite the fact that a number of key industrial and technological elements were made unavailable to us, we have remained committed to complying with all US government rules and regulations. At the same time, we have fulfilled our contractual obligations to customers and suppliers, and have survived and forged ahead against all odds.

    “Nevertheless, in its relentless pursuit to tighten its stranglehold on our company, the US government has decided to proceed and completely ignore the concerns of many companies and industry associations.

    “This decision was arbitrary and pernicious, and threatens to undermine the entire industry worldwide. This new rule will impact the expansion, maintenance, and continuous operations of networks worth hundreds of billions of dollars that we have rolled out in more than 170 countries.

    “It will also impact communications services for the more than 3 billion people who use Huawei products and services worldwide. To attack a leading company from another country, the US government has intentionally turned its back on the interests of Huawei’s customers and consumers. This goes against the US government’s claim that it is motivated by network security.

    “This decision by the US government does not just affect Huawei. It will have a serious impact on a wide number of global industries. In the long run, this will damage the trust and collaboration within the global semiconductor industry which many industries depend on, increasing conflict and loss within these industries.

    “The US is leveraging its own technological strengths to crush companies outside its own borders. This will only serve to undermine the trust international companies place in US technology and supply chains. Ultimately, this will harm US interests.

    “Huawei is undertaking a comprehensive examination of this new rule. We expect that our business will inevitably be affected. We will try all we can to seek a solution. We hope that our customers and suppliers will continue to stand with us and minimize the impact of this discriminatory rule”.

  • US court grants Nigeria access to key documents in $9 billion P&ID case

    US court grants Nigeria access to key documents in $9 billion P&ID case

    A US court has granted Nigeria access to key documents in the $9 billion case with Process & Industrial Developments (P&ID), which agreed to build a gas-processing plant in the country.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Judge Lorna Schofield, who presided over the sitting, granted Nigeria the access on Thursday, while noting that P&ID has an undisputed interest in subpoenaed information.

    Recall that Nigeria had through the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami filed an ex-parte application seeking to subpoena 10 different banks for “all documents concerning any transaction” relating to the P&ID case.

    The US District Court for the Southern District of New York granted Nigeria’s application to request from 10 US banks documents that may incriminate officials of P&ID.

    In the ex-parte application filed by Malami, Nigeria seeks subpoenas of 10 different banks for “all documents concerning any transaction,” dating back 11 years, involving 60 individuals and corporate entities to enable it substantiate allegations of crimes and financial impropriety.

    However, P&ID filed a response to the application as an interested person but did not oppose Nigeria’s application.

    P&ID only urged that, if the court grants the application, Nigeria should be required to promptly provide P&ID’s counsel with copies of all documents produced, and with the opportunity to attend all depositions conducted, pursuant to the subpoenas.

    The firm founded by two Irish men described Nigeria’s application as “a desperate attempt to substantiate her spurious allegations of a fraud supposedly ‘carried out’ by P&ID.”

    “If the court grants Nigeria’s application, the court should ensure P&ID’s access to any resulting discovery from the third-party subpoena recipients, consistent with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45 and this court’s precedent.

    “If Nigeria serves the subpoenas, all discovery should be shared with P&ID. P&ID does not expect Nigeria’s discovery efforts to turn up evidence of fraud by P&ID – because there was no fraud – but P&ID wants to make sure that Nigeria does not mischaracterise any evidence obtained by, for example, selectively disclosing bank transfers in other court proceedings to try to make them appear suspicious,” P&ID stated in its response to the application.

    Meanwhile, reacting to the court’s decision, P&ID said, “We are pleased with the U.S. court’s decision to grant P&ID discovery as part of Nigeria’s 1782 application. Nigeria’s desperate plea to keep the results of its fishing expedition hidden was rejected by the U.S. court. As a result, AG Malami will not be able to selectively and misleadingly use this discovery in the English courts as part of its baseless fraud case to avoid paying P&ID.”

    It also said that by the ruling, the court had rejected Nigeria’s attempt to keep P&ID in the dark about the discovery it sought.

    Despite Nigeria’s submissions to the contrary, the court ordered Nigeria to give P&ID access to any documents it received and to any depositions conducted.

    The court noted, “P&ID has an undisputed interest in the subpoenaed information as applicant states that its investigations and criminal proceedings relate to P&ID, and the requested material relates to P&ID as well.”

    Nigeria was also ordered to meet and confer with the “interested parties as is necessary.”

    Nigeria and P&ID are locked in legal battles over a gas supply and process agreement entered with the Irish firm. A London commercial court had entered a $9.6 billion award against Nigeria.

    Nigeria is making frantic efforts to set aside the judgement and had launched criminal investigations against the company and its officials.

  • COVID-19: Like David, you will recover all, spiritual advisor tells Trump

    COVID-19: Like David, you will recover all, spiritual advisor tells Trump

    Pentecostal Pastor from Florida, Pastor Paula White-Cain has told U.S. President Donald Trump that just like biblical king David he will recover from setbacks caused by the global Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) crisis.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Pastor White-Cain, who is spiritual advisor to President Trump, stated this at the White House National Day of Prayer Service held at the front lawn of the White House alongside other faith leaders on Thursday.

    In her speech, White-Cain prayed for no delays to the deliverance of COVID-19 and no delays to healing and a vaccination, stressing that if two or three of shall agree as touching anything, it will be done.

    Read her speech below:

    What an honor to be here with you, President and First Lady, Vice President, Second Lady. It’s a beautiful day to lift up our Lord and Savior. He is a certain God in uncertain times. And the Bible says, if two or three of us agree as touching anything, it will be done.

    Job 22, verse 28 says: If you decree a thing and declare a thing, it will be established. So, God, we come in agreement with your word and with your name — the name of Jesus.

    Psalm 40, verse 17 says: You are my help and my deliver. Do not delay, Oh God. I declare no more delays to the deliverance of COVID-19. No more delays to healing and a vaccination. No more delays to restoration of this great nation, the United States of America.

    For Psalm 71:2 says: In your righteousness, deliver us and rescue us, incline your ear and save us.

    Psalm 107 says: You deliver us out of the stress and out of destruction.

    Your word will not return void, according to Isaiah chapter 55, verse 11. So I declare your word. I declare divine intervention and supernatural turnaround. You will restore this land.

    According to Psalm 118:25: Save our nation, oh Lord, and send prosperity now.

    For Deuteronomy 28:8 says: Command your blessing upon this land. You said in Deuteronomy 8:9 to bring us into good land without any lack.

    For your word declares in Psalm 33:2: Blessed is the nation whose God is Lord.

    So I declare you right now to be Lord over this nation, over the United States of America, and we receive your blessing over any plague, over any economic distress.

    You will stay the hand of the enemy, according to Second Samuel chapter 21, verse 16: When 70,000 men died by a plague, David cried out as he covered himself in prayer. And the Lord answered and said, “It is enough.”

    Stay now thine hand. Lord, let that be the cry today, and let that be your answer. Lord, enough coronavirus, enough to death, enough to fear, enough to poverty. Stay thine your hand.

    We pray over President Trump and First Lady, Vice President and Second Lady, and this administration. I declare Psalm 89, verse 21: Let your hand establish President Trump, and let your arm strengthen him. I declare Psalm 98:1 that your right hand and your holy arm will give Him victory. We declare victory in the name of Jesus.

    Isaiah 58:11 says: Guide him continually. And you said in Psalm 78:72 that you would guide him by the skillfulness of your hand.

    You declared in Psalm 43 that send out your light and truth and let him lead his household, his administration, in the name of Jesus.

    Now, Lord, we pray for your mercies, for they are new every single day. And every morning, your mercies are new. Your steadfast love never ceases. I declare new mercies for hospital workers, new mercies for doctors and nurses, moms and dads, pastors and clergies, CEOs and employers, for the President and Vice President.

    God, your love is steadfast and it endures forever. So right now, wrap your arms of love around every person who is hurting, every person who is confused, scared, tired, weary sick, lonely. Let them know your love. Let them know that you will never leave them and you will never forsake them.

    And in conclusion, I declare Isaiah chapter 43, verse 19: I ask the Lord to do a new thing in our nation by giving waters in the wilderness and streams in the desert.

    Malachi 4:2 says: Jesus, arise over the nation with healing in your wings.

    President, one last word: Like David, who had had victory, after victory, after victory, after victory, would face his biggest battle — it was called Ziklag. And they would take his wives and his children, and the city would be burned down. And he cried and he wept, and he began to pray out to God. And God gave him a word.

    And through fasting and praying, I believe this is the word for you and for this nation: The Lord spoke to him and said: Pursue and go after them, and you shall, without fail, recover all.

    Sir, the word of the Lord, I believe, for this nation and for this administration is: You will recover all.

  • Old people in U.S. complain of discrimination amid pandemic

    Old people in U.S. complain of discrimination amid pandemic

    On the good days, Bonnie Reed believes that, for the first time in a long time, just about everyone is united for a common cause – to protect society’s most vulnerable citizens against the coronavirus.

    On the bad days, the Sherman Oaks senior is stunned by the carelessness she sees around her.

    She sees it in the unmasked young people who saunter toward her and her husband, Alton, with little regard for social distancing.

    She sees it in the decisions of some governors to reopen economies despite dire warnings from public health officials.

    Reed, who did not want to reveal her age, tries to not take it personally.

    But on those bad days, it can feel as though such actions send a clear message about how little some people care about the well-being of older adults, who make up roughly 80 per cent of those who die from COVID-19 complications.

    “Am I the only one feeling like they’re ready to throw us out?” she asks herself.

    As the debate rages over when or how to resume public life, older adults like Reed have increasingly borne witness to behavior and rhetoric that implies that their lives are not as valuable as reviving the economy.

    Ageism has been quietly pervasive in American culture for decades, according to those who work with and study the health of seniors.

    But they fear that this particular form of discrimination has become magnified during the pandemic as those who have lost income and stability look for someone to blame.

    “The stigma (against elders) is growing,” said Dilip Jeste, a geriatric psychiatrist at the University of California, San Diego Center for Healthy Aging.

    “Anytime you mention the virus and risk, immediately people think of older adults. They think of the people more likely to be hospitalised, to take up beds in the ICU,” the psychiatrist said.

    This rejection of prolonged sacrifices made by all for the sake of the old has been voiced from the highest ranks of government.

    “Let’s get back to living,” Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick told Fox’s Tucker Carlson in late March, defending President Donald Trump’s push at the time to reopen businesses by Easter.

    Patrick, who turned 70 in March, said no one had asked him if he was willing to risk his survival in order to save the American economy for future generations.

    But, he added, “If that’s the exchange, I’m all in.”

    Nationwide anti-lockdown protests show that many have taken that idea to heart. One woman among the dozens who rallied outside Tennessee’s state capitol on April 20 held a sign that read “Sacrifice the weak, reopen (Tennessee).”

    Koshin Paley Ellison, co-founder of The New York Zen Center for Contemplative Care, said a photo of the sign was circulated among the community of older adults he leads in spiritual practice.

    “What does that do to those who are feeling weak? It terrifies them,” Paley Ellison said.

    But no one from the group was surprised.

    On a Facebook chat, they talked about how a subtler disdain for older people has been a running thread in American culture.

    They are well aware of the prevailing belief that beauty and productivity – the primary measures of worth in the U.S. – are the domains of the young.

    But this prejudice has become acute during the pandemic, they agreed.

    “It’s open season for discrimination against older, vulnerable people,” one person commented.

    Eight prominent psychologists from across the globe were so concerned about mounting ageism that in mid-April they wrote an academic paper on the issue for the Gerontological Society of America.

    “What we are seeing in public discourse is an increasing portrayal of those over the age of 70 as being all alike with regard to being helpless, frail, and unable to contribute to society,” they said.

    The negative health effects of ageism are well-documented.

    When seniors face age-based discrimination and internalise harmful stereotypes, they are more likely to experience stress and depression and are at higher risk for chronic illnesses.

    A 2018 study from researchers at Yale University found that ageism could lead to $63 billion in additional annual health care costs in the U.S.

    Jeste, the geriatric psychiatrist at UC San Diego, worries that an increase in ageism could lead to weaker immune systems among the elderly.

    “It could put them at higher risk of developing COVID complications.

    “We are perpetuating that,” Jeste said.

    Gregory Kuhl, a 69-year-old Hollywood resident, said he experienced age bias well before the coronavirus’s siege.

    Kuhl has severe spinal stenosis, a condition that compresses the nerves in his spinal cord and makes walking painful.

    He has often felt invisible in public; many people assume he isn’t capable or worthy of conversation, he said, because he is older and uses a wheelchair.

    That sensation of invisibility has reached a fever pitch during the pandemic. Going to the grocery store has been especially frustrating, Kuhl said.

    Though he receives most of his food through the Meals on Wheels program, Kuhl buys dairy and produce at a Sprouts market near his apartment.

    Recently, a cashier pushed Kuhl’s groceries to the edge of the checkout counter, indicating that he would need to bag his own groceries to prevent viral spread.

    He placed the fruit and nuts in a bag on his lap, but it was too heavy to lift. Usually, the cashier would have hung the bag on the back of his wheelchair.

    A security guard eventually noticed Kuhl struggling and helped him out.

    Kuhl felt similarly disregarded when he learned that most coronavirus testing in Los Angeles occurs at drive-up mobile sites. “Where do seniors who no longer drive go to get tested?” he wondered.

    “Somebody somewhere needs to be thinking about the consequences (of the shutdown) for older people,” Kuhl said in an interview.

    In these unprecedented times, unfavorable perceptions of older adults can be a matter of life and death, according to advocates for seniors and people with disabilities.

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom was roundly criticised recently after his administration advised hospitals to prioritise younger people with greater life expectancy for care during the coronavirus outbreak.

    Those guidelines were swiftly retracted. They were not, however, without precedent.

    When doctors are forced to make gut-wrenching decisions around who will receive scarce medical resources such as ventilators, two factors are typically considered.

    First, the likelihood that a person’s life will be saved, and the estimated years of life left, said David Magnus, director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics.

    “If you’ve got strong evidence that someone will die in a year, that’s a pretty good reason for saying that person should be a lower priority for scarce ventilators,” Magnus said.

    The bioethicist noted that in an “era of plenty,” health care systems often spend large amounts of money keeping people alive for weeks or months; a quarter of Medicare spending occurs in the last year of life.

    The institutional concept of older people being worth less than younger people predates the pandemic. Cass Sunstein, a legal scholar who worked for the Obama administration, once proposed focusing government policies on saving years of life rather than individual lives.

    The Environmental Protection Agency used a similar calculus during the George W. Bush administration when it was weighing the benefits of power-plant emission regulations.

    The agency determined that people over 70 years old were worth just 67 per cent of the lives of younger people.

    Jeste insists that this way of thinking is short-sighted.

    Assigning a value to seniors based on their economic output ignores the many other ways people contribute to society, he said.

    They travel and volunteer.

    They are mentors with decades of hard-earned wisdom. They take care of grandchildren and older family members.

    It’s important for older people to question negative stereotypes and resist them if possible, said Becca Levy, a professor of epidemiology at the Yale School of Public Health who has been researching attitudes on aging since the 1990s.

    “We’ve found that those who value and affirm their own meaningful contributions to society can avoid internalising those stereotypes,” she said.

    On the flip side, Levy’s research shows that older adults with negative attitudes about aging may live 7.5 years less than those with positive attitudes.

    Bonnie Reed knows her worth.

    The retired schoolteacher and her 74-year-old husband, Alton, volunteer for political campaigns and the Red Cross, and they’ve been trained by the Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) programme to spring into action if an earthquake or fire happens in their community.

    She checks in on neighbours and makes sure her older cousin’s refrigerator is fully stocked.

    “We try to help where we can,” Reed said.

  • China defends virus record, accuses U.S. of “groundless” distraction

    Chinese state media hit back at the U.S. on Monday, accusing President Donald Trump’s administration of trying to divert attention from its own “incompetence” with allegations about the spread of the novel coronavirus.

    The commentary in the Global Times newspaper, published under the auspices of the Chinese Communist Party’s People’s Daily, dismissed as “groundless” allegations that China had covered up the scale of coronavirus outbreak.

    It said U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s claim that intelligence agencies were following up “significant” evidence that the virus came from a laboratory in the Chinese city of Wuhan was “bluffing.”

    “The truth is that Pompeo does not have any evidence. If Washington has solid evidence, then it should let research institutes and scientists examine and verify it.

    “The U.S. government’s goal was to blame China for the pandemic as well as to manipulate public opinion and to avoid being accused of “pandemic malfeasance,” the paper said.

    It added that the ultimate goal of President Trump now was to win election and gain a second term in November.

    Meanwhile, Canadian media have reported the Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, as saying that it is “too early to draw firm conclusions,” about the theory that the coronavirus originated in a Chinese laboratory.

    Canada is a member of the Five Eyes intelligence alliance with the U.S., the UK, Australia and New Zealand.

    Scientists consider it more likely the virus was transmitted to humans from bats via another animal.

    The U.S. intelligence community last week concluded that the virus was not man-made

  • China says it has no interest in meddling in U.S. election

    China says it has no interest in meddling in U.S. election

    China has no interest in interfering in the U.S. presidential election, it said on Thursday, after U.S. President Donald Trump said he believed Beijing would try to make him lose his re-election bid in November.

    “The U.S. presidential election is an internal affair, we have no interest in interfering in it,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said at a daily briefing.

    “We hope the people of the U.S. will not drag China into its election politics.”

    On Wednesday, Trump said “China will do anything they can to have me lose this race”.

    Trump added that he believed Beijing wants his Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, to win the election to ease the pressure Trump has placed on China over trade and other issues.

    Trump also said he was looking at different options in terms of consequences for Beijing over the Coronavirus pandemic.

    He and other top officials have blamed China for COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the new coronavirus.

    It has infected more than 1 million Americans and has thrown the U.S. economy into a deep recession.

    “There are many things I can do,” Trump said. “We’re looking for what happened.’’

    Geng reiterated during Thursday’s briefing that China was a victim of the epidemic and not its accomplice.

    Geng added that attempts by “certain politicans” to shift the blame away from their poor handling of the outbreak to Beijing would only “expose the problems of the U.S. itself”.

    “The U.S. should know this: the enemy is the virus, not China,” he said.

  • U.S. Congress to return on May 4 to start coronavirus stimulus talks

    U.S. Congress to return on May 4 to start coronavirus stimulus talks

    Both chambers of the U.S. Congress will convene on May 4 to begin working on the government’s fifth bill this year to address the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic, leaders in the Senate and House of Representatives said.

    “If it is essential for doctors, nurses, health care workers, truck drivers, grocery store workers, and other brave Americans to keep carefully manning their duty stations, then it is essential for senators to carefully man ours and support them,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said in a tweet.

    Following McConnell’s announcement that the Senate would convene on May 4, House majority leader Steny Hoyer said the Democrat-controlled House would do the same.

    The latest stimulus package has already been beset by partisan divides as Democrats seek government funds for state and local authorities, while McConnell has accused Democratic governors of financial mismanagement prior to the pandemic.

    “Why should the people and taxpayers of America be bailing out poorly run states (like Illinois, as example) and cities, in all cases Democrat run and managed, when most of the other states are not looking for bailout help?,” U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted on Monday.

    Hoyer said on Monday that Trump is “leaving states to fend for themselves.”

    The U.S. Congress has passed an unprecedented amount of stimulus funding – nearing 3 trillion dollars – with many Americans already obtaining direct payments of 1,200 dollars.

    The latest 484-billion-dollar stimulus, passed in late March, aimed at aiding small businesses and hospitals, and provided new funding for coronavirus testing capacities.

  • COVID-19: Trump advises Church leaders against holding services

    COVID-19: Trump advises Church leaders against holding services

    U.S. President Donald Trump has advised Church leaders to wait for people to heal from the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) before they hold church services in person.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports President Trump gave the advice on Friday during a press briefing when a reporter asked him what his message was to pastors who refuse to follow social distancing guidelines.

    “I know there are some pastors and ministers and others that want to get together. And I have great respect for them. Two of them I know. But I would say first, heal — I’m a Christian — heal our country.

    “Let’s get healed before we do this and there’s time to do that. We’ll do it for, hopefully, the rest of our lives,” Trump responded.

    He also revealed he would be watching the service of Pastor Robert Jeffress of First Baptist Church in Dallas, Texas online this Easter Sunday.