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United States EU Government

EU May Ban Travel From US As It Reopens Borders, Citing Coronavirus Failures (seattletimes.com) 231

European Union countries rushing to revive their economies and reopen their borders after months of coronavirus restrictions are prepared to block Americans from entering because the United States has failed to control the scourge, according to draft lists of acceptable travelers seen by The New York Times. From a report: That prospect, which would lump American visitors in with Russians and Brazilians as unwelcome, is a stinging blow to American prestige in the world and a repudiation of President Donald Trump's handling of the virus in the United States, which has more than 2.3 million cases and upward of 120,000 deaths, more than any other country. European nations are currently haggling over two potential lists of acceptable visitors based on how countries are faring with the coronavirus pandemic. Both include China, as well as developing nations like Uganda, Cuba and Vietnam.

Travelers from the United States and the rest of the world have been excluded from visiting the European Union -- with few exceptions mostly for repatriations or "essential travel" -- since mid-March. But a final decision on reopening the borders is expected early next week, before the bloc reopens July 1. [...] Prohibiting American travelers from entering the European Union would have significant economic, cultural and geopolitical ramifications. Millions of American tourists visit Europe every summer. Business travel is common, given the huge economic ties between the United States and the EU.

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EU May Ban Travel From US As It Reopens Borders, Citing Coronavirus Failures

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  • Not just them (Score:4, Insightful)

    by dunkelfalke ( 91624 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @04:49PM (#60218892)

    The EU also should ban travel from the UK for the very same reason.

    • Re:Not just them (Score:5, Informative)

      by bsolar ( 1176767 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @05:02PM (#60218966)

      The UK has a doubling period of 174 days, meaning positive cases will take that time to double. Most EU countries are above 200 days, which is even better.

      In the USA the doubling period is 54 days.

      • Re:Not just them (Score:5, Informative)

        by Xylantiel ( 177496 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @05:36PM (#60219160)

        Current rates of new infections (7-day averages):

        • France: 7 new per day per million people
        • Germany: 7 new per day per million people
        • UK: 18 new per day per million people
        • USA: 83 new per day per million people

        Given that, it would be totally irresponsible for the EU to allow travel from the US. The US's ongoing rate is comparable to the PEAK France had back at the end of March. All this data is available and cited on wikipedia. Additionally, France and Germany's rates have been stable for well over a month even with short-term contained outbreaks. The US's rate show all signs that it will significantly increase in the coming weeks.

        • And for all that, France had a higher per capita death rate than the USA.

          As did the UK.

          Italy.

          Belgium.

          etc, etc, etc....

        • The US's rate show all signs that it will significantly increase in the coming weeks.

          Ahh, but you are incorrect. The US president in his unfathomable wisdom has solved this problem with his suggestion to "slow the testing down". Soon, the US growth rate in new cases will be zero. Now, if he can just get the US people to listen to his great ideas.

        • Re:Not just them (Score:4, Informative)

          by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @08:07PM (#60219844)
          That belies a curiosity I've noticed in the world virus stats [worldometers.info]. Ratio of deaths to infections (what percentage of reported cases died).
          • Belgium - 5,247 cases/1M, 838 deaths/1M - 16.0% of cases died
          • France - 2471 cases/1M, 455 deaths/1M. 18.4% of cases died
          • Italy - 3,950 cases/1M, 573 deaths/1M, 14.5% of cases died
          • UK - 4,511 cases/1M, 632 deaths/1M, 14.0% of cases died
          • Netherlands - 2,902 cases/1M, 356 deaths/1M - 12.3% of cases died
          • Canada - 2,701 caess/1M, 224 deaths/1M - 9.0% of cases died
          • Sweden - 6,025 cases/1M, 511 deaths/1M - 8.5% of cases died
          • USA - 7,320 cases per million, 373 deaths per million, 5.1% of cases died
          • Denmark - 2,169 caess/1M, 104 deaths/1M 4.8% of cases died
          • Germany - 2301 cases/1M, 107 deaths/1M. 4.7% of caes died
          • Portugul - 3,897 cases/1M, 151 deaths/1M - 3.9% of cases died

          Either the health care system in Belgium, France, Italy, the UK, etc. sucks and they're letting 3-4x as many patients die as the U.S, Germany, Denmark, and Portugul. Or there's a different, more deadly strain of COVID-19 in those parts of the EU. Or (most likely IMHO) these countries are systematically undercounting the number of cases. If you assume the last and normalize the case numbers for a 5% death rate, then the U.S. rate of new infections is nowhere near the peak France experienced. And if you go by a 1% fatality rate (which is near the top currently estimated by the WHO and CDC), then there are a helluva lot more unreported/undetected cases out there.

          Anyhow, the U.S. is a big country - roughly 2x as big as the EU. Most of the COVID-19 cases in the U.S. have been concentrated in the northeast. Most of the states which are re-opening (or never closed) [wired.com] have had substantially fewer virus cases and deaths [worldometers.info] than the rest of the U.S. and the EU. They are re-opening because they feel they have a handle on the situation. The only ones I see on the list which seem sketchy for re-opening are Colorado, Georgia, Indiana, and Mississippi.

          • Alabama - 6,342 cases/1M, 176 deaths/1M, 2.8% of cases died
          • Alaska - 1,064 cases/1M, 16 deaths/1M, 1.5% of cases died
          • Arizona - 7,993 cases/1M, 190 deaths/1M, 2.4% of cases died
          • Colorado - 5,365 caess/1M, 289 deaths/1M, 5.4% of cases died
          • Georgia - 6,374 cases/1M, 253 deaths/1M, 4.0% of cases died
          • Indiana - 6,368 cases/1M, 382 deaths/1M, 6.0% of cases died
          • Mississippi - 7,694 cases/1M, 332 deaths/1M, 4.3% of cases died
          • Missouri - 3,134 cases/1M, 162 deaths/1M, 5.2% of cases died
          • Montana - 695 cases/1M, 20 deaths/1M, 2.9% of cases died
          • Nebraska - 9,283 cases/1M, 129 deaths/1M, 1.4% of cases died
          • North Dakota - 4,357 cases/1M, 102 deaths/1M, 2.3% of cases died
          • Oklahoma - 2,787 cases/1M, 94 deaths/1M, 3.4% of cases died
          • South Dakota - 7,181 cases/1M, 94 deaths/1M, 1.3% of cases died
          • Texas - 4.283 cases/1M, 77 deaths/1M, 1.8% of cases died
          • Utah - 5,708 cases/1M, 51 deaths/1M, 0.9% of cases died
          • West Virginia - 1,447 cases/1M, 51 deaths/1M, 3.5% of caes died

          Now, given that there's free travel between the U.S. states, I can understand the EU implementing a blanket ban on travel from the U.S. There's simply no way to be sure if someone coming from the U.S. is from an area that's substantially safer than the EU, or more dangerous. But don't try to characterize it as the U.S. handling of the virus being incompetent relative to the EU. Most of U.S. states are handling it better than the EU. It's just the handful which are not which skew the national stats.

          • New York - 21,211 cases/1M, 1,610 deaths/1M, 7.6% of cases died
          • New Jersey - 19,473 caess/1M, 1,
          • Re:Not just them (Score:4, Interesting)

            by dryeo ( 100693 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @09:13PM (#60220094)

            Part of the varying death rates may well depend on how well different countries protected their most vulnerable. Here in Canada, most of the deaths have been in Quebec, and to a lesser extend Ontario. They both cheaped out on their extended care homes, especially Quebec, who paid their workers so little and gave them so few hours that they had to work at multiple old age homes. Get sick at one, got to another and spread it. Not to mention that when things got bad, the workers ran. We had to bring in the army to care for the old in Quebec and what they found was horrible.
            Most of the other Provinces have done pretty well and if you ignored Quebec, our numbers would be a lot better. .Here in BC, we look over the border at Washington State and it scares the shit out of us, meanwhile you didn't even mention them

          • by solanum ( 80810 )

            5% death rate is way over the top. Most of the studies to date suggest around 1% or just under. Obviously this is increased where health systems are overwhelmed, poor to start with, inequitable etc.

            So I agree, the rates vs confirmed infection in most are meaningless because testing is inadequate. The US is doing a better job in testing than many countries (but not all).

            Of course if you are somewhere where the rate of infection (not just the number of infections) is increasing, as is the case in several US

          • by SomeoneFromBelgium ( 3420851 ) on Wednesday June 24, 2020 @03:17AM (#60220812)

            The fact that many EU countries have more deaths per cases is makes you assume that it is the result from underreported cases. I find that no a logical conclusion.
            If that were the case, testing in the EU should be much lower than in the US, which is not the case [ourworldindata.org].

            I would rather assume that the number of deaths in the US is underreported. I know for a fact that Belgium has received critique intenationally because it reports essentially any excess mortality as being linked to Corona. The reasoning is that there could be no other reason than the current crisis. In this way you evaluate not only the virus itself but also the effect of all the measures taken to stop the virus.
            You site total number claiming that the USA has everything under control.
            Below are current new cases per million, which show that for the EU countries things are well under control (under 10.000 new cases per million) the amount of new cases US is more than 10 times as much and is still rising...

            Belgium 6,385
            France 9,8200
            Germany 8,200
            Italy 4,366
            Netherlands 4,435
            Spain 7,144
            Sweden 0
            United Kingdom 19,076
            Canada 10,333
            United States 103,196

          • Belgium is actually overcounting - if someone has as much as coughed before their death, it is counted as a coronavirus death, without even testing.

      • Re:Not just them (Score:4, Informative)

        by dunkelfalke ( 91624 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @05:49PM (#60219222)

        I don't really trust the British numbers considering they have only 42000 confirmed deaths but way over 60000 excess deaths.

        • I don't really trust the British numbers considering they have only 42000 confirmed deaths but way over 60000 excess deaths.

          There was already proof that the UK is undercounting care homes. Generally it's clear that the UK was only counting confirmed deaths and the truth was much worse than people said [theguardian.com]. It's really suspicious that the number of cases has been systematically falling but the number of deaths has not. The deaths is normally the true sign of what's happening with the infection (but with a three week delay). Having said all that, I think, though, the reason is that currently most infections in the UK are in care h

      • The doubling time (of cumulative case) is useful in the early stage of the pandemic, when the cases are growing exponentially, with a fixed doubling time. It's irrelevant in the present phase of the pandemic, where countries have gone through lockdowns and reopenings. Two countries with the same number of new cases per day today, but a different number of closed cases from the months before will have the different apparent doubling times (slopes of cumulative cases on a log scale) while they are just as dan

    • by U0K ( 6195040 )
      The R value in the UK is currently still below 1.
      Here in Germany we have an R of 2.76 now according to today's data with the new cases from Guetersloh, Warendorf, and Goettingen.
      So that would not be a very good reason to ban travel from the UK.
    • Re:Not just them (Score:4, Informative)

      by Generic User Account ( 6782004 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @05:22PM (#60219090)
      The UK wisened up after Boris Johnson needed to be treated in the ICU. The total death count in the UK is much higher than it needed to be, but currently their rate of new infections is acceptable. There are five times as many people in the US as in the UK, but the US has 30 times as many new infections per day as the UK, and the daily new infections in the US are rising, while they're declining in the UK.
    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      The US is the worst by a order of magnitude, and over the past month losing all the gains. Our new infection rate is passing 100 cases per day per million. A couple weeks ago it was only California and a few other states that we approaching that rate. Now many states are.

      US persons should not be traveling out of the country or even traveling for the next moth or so. We need to wear masks and stay in quarantine. Any state with a sustained death rate of more than 1 person per day per million, like Arizona o

    • America first in Covid !

  • Play stupid games (with deadly pandemics), win stupid prizes (illness, death, international ostracism).
  • Flamebait (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Hope Thelps ( 322083 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @05:04PM (#60218972)

    That prospect, which would lump American visitors in with Russians and Brazilians as unwelcome, is a stinging blow to American prestige in the world and a repudiation of President Donald Trump's handling of the virus in the United States

    For pity's sake. You may want to look at the case numbers and death rate and consider if anything could be done better going forwards or next time. You might even want to take any of this as a basis to judge the performance of your leaders in whatever way you consider appropriate, but controls on movements of people into a region to limit spread of a contagion are NOT a comment on your prestige in the world. This childish crap is really unhelpful.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by RoccamOccam ( 953524 )
      Good point. Death rates are far more important than (detected) infections. Death rate per 100K citizens:
      Belgium 84.89
      United Kingdom 64.27
      Spain 60.62
      Italy 57.35
      Sweden 50.30
      France 44.29
      US 36.80
    • but controls on movements of people into a region to limit spread of a contagion are NOT a comment on your prestige in the world. This childish crap is really unhelpful.

      It's not directly, and the comment is not intended to imply it is directly. American holds itself high as the authority on health around the world. They claim to have the best healthcare, the best doctors, the best system, the best policies, yadda yadda yadda. That is prestige. Controlling movement of people to limit spread of a virus that this prestigious country couldn't get under control and lumping them in the likes of countries with historically garbage health systems is very much a comment on America'

  • by future assassin ( 639396 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @05:16PM (#60219046)

    They'll break your rules and not give a fuck about the country they are in. https://globalnews.ca/news/706... [globalnews.ca]

  • I'm an American (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @05:17PM (#60219058)
    and they should. We are fucking up royally. The last straw came when our President, the leader of the country, came out and said he's told his staff to slow down testing in order to improve the numbers and that he doesn't "kid". Yes, his staff backtracked it, but they're not the boss, he is.

    Europe shouldn't let us in until Trump is safely out of the office. This is just too crazy. I know we don't like partisanship around here, but Trump is no longer a partisan issue. He doesn't just have disdain for science, he is in open conflict with it, and we will suffer for it. Europe, if they're smart, will not take part in that suffering.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by enigma32 ( 128601 )

      ... and they should. We are fucking up royally.

      I was agreeing with you until:

      Europe shouldn't let us in until Trump is safely out of the office.

      That's where you went from being a rational human being, with perhaps an understanding of science, to a partisan fool. Trump may be bad news for lots of other reasons, but can we please not conflate the issues? Borders should remain closed as long as there is a health risk, not a political disagreement.

      • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday June 23, 2020 @06:23PM (#60219420)
        to cut back on testing. Then he doubled down and said he wasn't kidding. These are things that happened.

        How far does Trump have to go? What would he have to do for you to recognize him as a threat to your safety? He is ignoring literally all known science on managing pandemics, likely to pry the economy open again in a desperate bid to win re-election (since sitting presidents lose in a bad economy).

        It's not a partisan issue anymore. Trump has gone too far. This is insane. I don't know what else to call it. You do not call for less testing in a pandemic. You do not joke about something that's on track to kill 250,000 people by November. That just, it's insane.

        Trump was right about one thing. He's shooting over 1,000 people a day on Main Street and nobody seems to care. Europe would be wise not to follow the US down this path.
        • It's not a partisan issue anymore. Trump has gone too far. This is insane.

          What would he have to do for you to recognize him as a threat to your safety?

          I didn't say border closures are a partisan issue. You bringing Trump in general into a discussion about science/health makes it a partisan issue. Can you not see that? You need to stop bringing your hatred of that man into every conversation. It doesn't help your cause.

          Yes, Trump is an idiot. That doesn't mean that Europe should close its borders to American citizens until someone else is elected. That's ridiculous.

          Please let the science dictate how nations should act, not your own political motivations.

      • by Ogive17 ( 691899 )
        I don't know.. as an American.. if I were another country looking at us, I'd ban traffic to keep the stupidity contained.

        Maybe the wall is actually a good idea. Not to keep people out but to keep us in. I'd take one for the team if the world benefits.
    • Another post in disguise designed to attack our president. Well, not so disguised once you get past the first two sentences, then it turns into political mouth breather territory.
      • short of /. supporting HTML that mimics neon lights I don't think I could make it more plan.

        Like I told the other guy on this thread, there are no words I can use to describe how far too far Trump has gone. You do not joke about something killing over 1000 Americans each and every day. And Trump himself said he wasn't joking ("I don't Kid"). Trump is actively trying to stop doctors, epidemiologists and scientists from containing the pandemic because he believes this will impact his re-election chances n
  • There is no controlling it in the sense of stopping it. You can only slow it so hospitals are not overwhelmed, while keeping fragile people as safe as possible.

    It will not stop until it fully spreads

    If a vaccine comes before then, I will be surprised. But by that point, I submit the slowed economy, slowing medical and other progress, will ultimately have cost more lives, as being behind where you should be is forever.

    • Why do you say that.
      Go to https://www.covidbyregion.com/ [covidbyregion.com]
      Look at 7 day rolling averages of new cases for:
      US, then Italy, Spain, China, Ireland, switzerland,.

      Lots of countries have brought their new case rates way down. Now they can test/ track. Keep the death rate very low until there is a vaccine.

      Many people seem to think we can't beat it, despite clear evidence from other countries that we can.

  • There are plenty of nice places in the world where Americans can travel and spend their money. The EU never seems to miss an opportunity to stick its thumb in America's eye and this latest thing will hurt them more than it will hurt the Americans. Perhaps the tourists from Syria will take of the slack in Paris. There will be plenty of rooms available at the George Cinq.

    • A reasonable ban would prevent Europeans from traveling to the US and spending their travel money here.

      Also, the rest of the world may follow Europe's lead. As long as we have one of the highest infection rates, few people will want to travel here, or accept travelers from here.

  • Given the new outbreaks it would seem advisable.

    • China's seeing around 50 new cases on a bad day, and they implement localized lock-downs when that happens. In the US we've been above 30,000 for three of the last four days... IOW I don't think EU is going to be too worried about China.

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