【美国真相】真正“放火”的州官!_风闻
兔家真探-让我们一起去探索真相吧!B站同号,有视频哦!2020-12-06 13:43
导读:懂王和肥猪是“投降派”,所以他们开派对是天经地义,不是“放火”。
美媒NEWSWEEK这篇报道点出了真正“放火”的州官!
当美国的医护人员连吃饭的时间都没有的时候,他们的州官却正在享用丰盛的感恩节大餐。
前方吃紧,后方紧吃!

在墨西哥度假,感恩节晚餐和一次选举聚会。这些只是官员最近几个月因违反锁定规则而道歉的部分原因。
州长们和市长们已经宣布了旨在帮助阻止冠状病毒在整个大流行中传播的限制措施。
但是,有些人似乎并没有遵照自己所规定的规则。
共和党州长面临的指控较少,主要是因为他们没有按照公共卫生专家的要求执行许多限制。
俄克拉荷马州州长凯文·斯蒂特(Kevin Stitt)在推特上说,他于3月将家人带到一家“挤满了”的餐馆(宣布紧急状态的前一天)后,遭到了强烈反对。
这些知名人物都被指控违反了抗疫准则。有些人道歉,另一些人坚持自己的行动。这是总结…
奥斯汀市长史蒂夫·阿德勒
11月初,随着冠状病毒病例数,住院和死亡人数上升,阿德勒敦促德克萨斯州奥斯汀市的居民呆在家里,不要对这种流行病“放松”。
但是,阿德勒(后来出现)在他在墨西哥度假一周的时候发出了集会电话。
奥斯汀美国政治家首次报道,他与其他七个人一起去了卡波圣卢卡斯,此前他女儿在奥斯丁一家酒店与20位客人进行了户外婚礼和招待会。
当时,奥斯汀的人们被要求避免以10人或10人以上的团体聚会,但没有旅行禁令。
阿德勒告诉当地报纸:“留在家中最安全。但是,我们并没有要求人们永远不要冒险。我们要求每个人在这样做时都尽可能安全。”
丹佛市长,迈克尔·汉考克
感恩节那天,墨西哥并不是市长唯一有争议的目的地。
汉考克上周坐在机场前往密西西比州的一家人聚会时,写道:“传递土豆,而不是冒犯别人…避免旅行。”
在登机之前片刻,他还告诉追随者“尽量避免旅行”,“尽可能多地呆在家里”和“举办虚拟聚会,而不是面对面吃饭”。
他后来道歉。他说:“我作为丈夫和父亲做出了决定,对于那些生气和失望的人,我谦虚地请你原谅我这个发自内心而不是脑袋的决定。”他的发言人说,汉考克回来后将自我隔离14天。
加利福尼亚州州长纽瑟姆
加利福尼亚州州长纽瑟姆上个月在纳帕谷的一家高档餐厅与一群知名游说者餐会被拍照后致歉。
这些照片首次发表在《旧金山纪事》上,显示没有人戴口罩,包括加利福尼亚医学协会的代表,在米其林星级的法国洗衣店,其中一些菜的价格为450美元。
州指南将私人聚会限制在户外的三个家庭中,但是,餐厅聚会的定义不太明确。他们说,房主应“将一张桌子上的顾客数量限制在一个家庭单位或要求坐在一起的顾客中”。
纽瑟姆谈到法国洗衣房的晚宴时说:“当我坐在更大的桌子旁时,我意识到那是一个比我预期的人数更大的团体,我犯了一个严重的错误。” “我不应该坐下来,而是应该站起来走回去,坐上我的车,开车回到我家。”
在他孩子学校的一名学生的COVID测试呈阳性之后,州长最近一直在进行自我隔离。
华盛顿特区市长Muriel Bowser
Bowser被指控违犯了她自己的旅行规则在上个月祝贺当选总统拜登的选举胜利。为了庆祝,Bowser到拜登所在的特拉华州了大约90英里的行程。
当时,特拉华州是华盛顿特区认定为高风险的42个州之一,这意味着前往一个州的居民应限制日常活动和自我监控14天。但是,该指南免除了基本旅行。
Bowser拒绝隔离,并为这次旅行辩护,称这是“必要的旅行”。
圣荷西市长山姆·利卡多
市长山姆·利卡多(Sam Liccardo)本周因参加感恩节晚餐而道歉,另外七位家庭成员参加了感恩节晚餐。
总共有5户家庭出席了晚宴-超出了允许的范围。本月初,加利福尼亚州下令将社交聚会限制为最多三个。
NBC首次报道说,利卡多(Liccardo)和年迈的父母在不知名的人群中在萨拉托加(Saratoga)的家中庆祝感恩节。
揭露消息后,加利福尼亚州市长说:“我为与家人一起参加感恩节大餐而做出的违反州规则的决定深表歉意。我理解我作为公职人员有义务提供模范遵守公共卫生命令的义务,并且当然,不要忽视他们。我承诺做得更好。”
芝加哥市长Lori Lightfoot
芝加哥市长萝莉·莱特富特(Lori Lightfoot)为四月份从专业发型师那里剪发的决定辩护,当时沙龙因为该州的居家令而关闭。
民主党此前曾说过,“理发不是必须的”。
争议发生几天后,她说:“我是这座城市的公众人物。我在国家媒体上露面,并且出现在公众眼中。”
纽约州州长安德鲁·库莫(Andrew M.Cuomo)
他没有违反规则。 但是,有人会辩称,他非常接近。
在感恩节之前,州长警告他的纽约同胞,在美国各地越来越多的案件中,家庭聚会可能是危险的。
在假期临近之前,他对WAMC电台的采访引起了轰动。
他说:“我妈妈要来了,还有我的两个女儿。” 那是他89岁的母亲Matilda和他的两个女儿,其中一个住在芝加哥。
他的评论遭到了强烈反对,Cuomo取消了他的计划。
A vacation in Mexico, Thanksgiving dinners and an election party. These are just some of the reasons why officials have apologized for breaking lockdown rules in recent months.
Governors and mayors have been announcing restrictions aimed to help stop the spread of coronavirus throughout the pandemic.
Some, however, appear to maybe not to have been playing by their own rules.
Republican governors have faced fewer accusations, largely because they have not implemented as many of the restrictions that public health experts have called for.
One, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt, did face backlash after tweeting that he had taken his family to a “packed” restaurant in March—a day before announcing a state of emergency.
These well-known figures have all been accused of breaching anti-COVID guidelines. Some have issued apologies, others have stood by their actions. Here’s the rundown…
Austin Mayor, Steve Adler
In early November, as coronavirus case counts, hospitalizations and death counts rose, Adler urged residents in Austin, Texas, to stay home and “not relax” about the pandemic.
However, Adler—it later emerged—had issued his rallying call while he vacationed for a week in, Mexico.
He had gone to Cabo San Lucas with seven other people, the Austin American-Statesman first reported, following his daughter’s outdoor wedding and reception with 20 guests at an Austin hotel.
At that time, people in Austin were being asked to avoid gathering in groups of 10 or more, but there were no travel bans.
Adler told the local newspaper: “It is safest to stay home. However, we aren’t asking people to never venture out. We ask everyone to be as safe as possible when they do.”
Denver Mayor, Michael Hancock
Mexico was not the only controversial destination of choice for mayors this Thanksgiving.
“Pass the potatoes, not COVID… Avoid travel,” Hancock wrote last week as he sat in an airport en route to a family get-together in Mississippi.
Moments before boarding the plane, he also told his followers to “avoid travel, if you can,” “stay home as much as you can,” and “host virtual gatherings instead of in-person dinners.”
He later apologized. “I made my decision as a husband and father, and for those who are angry and disappointed, I humbly ask you to forgive decisions that are borne of my heart and not my head,” he said. His spokesperson said Hancock would be self-isolating for 14 days after he returns.
California Governor Newsom apologized last month after being photographed at an up-market restaurant in Napa Valley, with a group of prominent lobbyists.
The pictures, first published in the San Francisco Chronicle, showed no-one, including California Medical Association representatives, wearing face masks at the Michelin-starred French Laundry where some plates cost $450.
State guidelines limited private gatherings to three households outdoors, however, those for restaurants were less defined. They said owners should “limit the number of patrons at a single table to a household unit or patrons who have asked to be seated together.”
“As soon as I sat down at the larger table I realized it was a little larger group than I had anticipated and I made a bad mistake,” Newsom said of the dinner at the French Laundry. “Instead of sitting down, I should have stood up and walked back, got in my car and drove back to my house.”
The governor has been self-quarantining recently after a student at his child’s school tested positive for COVID.
Washington D.C. Mayor, Muriel Bowser
Bowser was accused of violating her own travel rules to congratulate President-elect Joe Biden on his election victory last month. The Democrat made a roughly 90-mile trip to Delaware, where Biden was based, in order to celebrate.
At the time, Delaware was one of 42 states deemed high-risk by D.C., meaning residents who have traveled to one should limit daily activities and self-monitor for 14 days. However, the guideline exempts essential travel.
Bowser declined to quarantine and defended the trip, saying it was “essential travel.”
San Jose Mayor, Sam Liccardo
Texan mayor Sam Liccardo apologised this week for attending a Thanksgiving dinner, which was attended by seven other family members.
In total, five households were present at the dinner—more than the rules allowed. Earlier this month California ordered that social gatherings be limited to a maximum of three.
NBC first reported that Liccardo celebrated Thanksgiving with his elderly parents at their Saratoga house along with an unknown group of people.
Following the revelations, the Californian mayor said: “I apologize for my decision to gather contrary to state rules, by attending this Thanksgiving meal with my family. I understand my obligation as a public official to provide exemplary compliance with the public health orders, and certainly not to ignore them. I commit to do better.”