From the CNN:

The Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics, delayed for a year due to the Covid-19 
pandemic, finally kicked off Wednesday. While the Games may represent a return 
to some sort of normal, this year’s event is anything but. The sport will 
present a welcome distraction to the ongoing global crisis. But World Health 
Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has urged us not 
to forget our reality. “By the time the Olympic flame is extinguished on the 
eighth of August, more than 100,000 more people will perish,” Tedros, who is in 
Tokyo for the Games, said on Wednesday. “The pandemic is a test, and the world 
is failing,” he said, adding that anyone who thinks the pandemic is over is 
living in a “fool’s paradise.” 
The WHO chief’s comments come as cases continue to surge globally, including in 
Japan, where Tokyo on Wednesday reported its highest daily increase of new 
infections since mid-January. Despite the country's struggle to rein in cases, 
Tokyo 2020 organizers have decided to push ahead. But with just two days until 
the formal opening ceremony on Friday, it is still unclear whether the public 
health measures in place will be enough to prevent the Games from becoming a 
global superspreader event. 
 
Some 11,000 athletes from 200 countries are set to arrive for the Olympics and 
the number of cases in Japan linked to the Games now stands at 79, according to 
organizers. Five of them are Olympic Village residents, three of which are 
athletes. Competitors including US gymnast Kara Eaker, basketball player Katie 
Lou Samuelson and tennis star Coco Gauff tested positive for Covid prior to 
arriving in Tokyo, cutting their 2020 Olympic dreams short. 

Opinion polls in Japan show that most people oppose holding a major sporting 
event during a public health crisis. Tokyo extended its coronavirus state of 
emergency until August 22, with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) 
barring fans from attending the competition -- an Olympic first. 

The United States also renewed its public health emergency on Tuesday, 
underlining the severity of the pandemic’s trajectory there. Covid-19 cases -- 
fueled by the fast-spreading Delta variant -- have nearly tripledover the last 
three weeks, with at least 44 states now seeing an increase. The Delta variant 
represents the vast majority (83%) of new infections, according to the US 
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 
 
There's a common theme behind the worsening Covid-19 numbers, according to CDC 
Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky. "This is becoming a pandemic of the 
unvaccinated," Walensky said at a Covid-19 briefing Friday. More than 97% of 
people getting hospitalized with the virus now are unvaccinated, she said. And 
99% of deaths are among the unvaccinated, according to the US Surgeon General.
 
Meanwhile, vaccination rates in the US have stalled. Less than half of the 
country’s population is fully vaccinated, according to CDC data, and the 
majority of those who are not vaccinated are not at all likely to get their 
shots, according to a poll published Tuesday by Axios-Ipsos. Dr. Anthony Fauci, 
President Joe Biden's chief medical adviser warned this week that if those 
holding out on the vaccine don’t change their minds, the US can expect a 
"smoldering" outbreak for "a considerable period of time.” 

The Dow suffered its biggest drop of the year on Monday, plunging by more than 
700 points as fears over the Delta variant also hit Wall Street.

In the United Kingdom, where the Delta variant is dominant and cases and deaths 
are also on the rise, Prime Minister Boris Johnson took a gamble in lifting 
England’s final Covid restrictions on Monday, admitting that the move could 
lead to more fatalities.

Roland.
Toronto.

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