Cuomo’s poster shows Trump as ‘man on the moon’ watching coronavirus pandemic


Governor Andrew CuomoAndrew Cuomo New York City reports zero COVID-19 deaths for the first time since the pandemic hit Florida health officials agreed to receive remdesivir of New York before DeSantis rejected the offer Cuomo says Northeast will likely see a surge in the cases of COVID-19 due to the increase in other parts of the country MORE (D) unveiled a poster Monday showing the New York experience during the coronavirus pandemic, which includes President TrumpDonald John TrumpDavis: The Supreme Court decision is bad news for Trump, good news for Vance Meadows trying to root out suspected White House leakers by providing them information: Axios Pressley beats DeVos for reopening of schools : ‘I would not trust you to worry about a house plant, much less my son’ MORE like the “man on the moon”.

The Governor added the pandemic-themed poster to a collection that is in the style of early 20th century posters.

The poster shows a mountain with a yellow line above it, representing the curve of the COVID-19 cases in New York. Symbols are used to show what happened during the period.

“I made a new one because of what we went through with COVID[-19] and I think the overall shape is familiar to you, ”Cuomo said when announcing the poster at a press conference on Monday.

Trump is shown sitting on a crescent moon, alongside the phrase, “It’s just the flu.”

“The sun is on the other side of the mountain. We just have to get to the other side of the mountain. There’s the man on the moon: “It’s just a flu,” Cuomo said Monday.

New York began as the epicenter of the pandemic in the US, and has recorded 402,263 positive cases in total, leading to 24,989 deaths, according to data from the New York State Department of Health.

In recent weeks, other states such as Arizona, Florida, and Texas are facing an increasing number of new cases, as shown in the poster, prompting New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut to institute a mandatory quarantine for visitors from states with increasing cases.

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