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Blqz Gottlieb says shorter quarantine period would still capture  vast majority  of virus cases
Washington ndash; The New Jersey man who admitted to spraying U.S. Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick with pepper spray during the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack was sentenced to 80 months in prison on Friday in a Washington, D.C. courtroom packed with Sicknick s colleagues and fellow officers. I don t know what got into you,  said federal Judge Thomas Hogan, as he imposed the yearslong prison sentence on Julian Khater,  s [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley vaso[/url] omehow you got determined to push your way through the crowd. Hogan also fined Khater $10,000. [url=https://www.stanleycups.it]stanley cups[/url]                                         Sicknickdied of natural causesa day afte [url=https://www.stanley-cup.fr]stanley quencher[/url] r defending the Capitol during the Jan. 6 assault, the D.C. medical examiner s office announced last year. He suffered strokes, with a medical examiner s report summary citing  acute brainstem and cerebellar infarcts due to acute basilar artery thrombosis. Friday s sentencing hearing drew busloads of other U.S. Capitol Police officers who wanted to honor their fallen colleague.        According to court documents and Julian Khater s plea agreement, he and codefendant George Tanios mdash; who pleaded guilty to lesser charges mdash; traveled to Washington, D.C. from West Virginia to attend former President Donald Trump s rally at the White House Ellipse.The pair moved from the rally grounds toward the Capitol, although investigators say they uncovered no evidence that the men planned on rioting that day. Surveillance video shows Khater reaching inside Tanios  backpack and retrieving on Zvzf Absolutely Fit To Travel
SEASONALITY REVISITED....A few days ago I argued that much of the recent decrease in violence in Iraq was probably due to normal seasonal factors: violence tends to peak in fall and spring, and drop in winter and summer.  I showed this seasonality pictorially via a chart of U.S. troop fatalities, one of the few data series that s both consistent and available for the entire course of the war.But troop fatalities are merely a proxy for violence, and an anonymous fellow who goes by the handle Engram argues that if you look at civilian death statistics there s no seasonali [url=https://www.stanley-cups.us]stanley website[/url] ty at [url=https://www.stanleymug.us]stanley cup[/url]  all.  Thus, the recent drop in deaths is almost certainly due to the surge.Now, Engram is pretty seriously invested in a highly distinctive view of the sources of violence in Iraq that I won t get into here  i.e., insurgency vs. terrorism vs. civil war , and is therefore also pretty invested in demonstrating that the surge is succeeding.  Still, numbers are numbers.  So what does he have The answer is on the right: a chart of civilian casualties since March 2005 that s taken from ICCC data and modified slightly to remove some artifacts.  Engram then fits a 6th order polynomial through the  [url=https://www.stanley-quencher.us]stanley quencher[/url] data to demonstrate that there s no evident seasonality.                                        Unfortunately, there are several problems with this.  The reason I didn t use this data in the first place is because it s available for only two and a half years.  That s just not long enough to show seasonality, especially w
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