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 Two years since the war in Afghanistan ended, the administration is remembering the sacrifice of service members, while acknowledging the work needed to help Afghans who aided the United States. Today, we pause to remember the selfless service of generations of brave women and men over the course of the conflict鈥攚ho, time and time again, sacrificed their own safety and security for that of their fellow Americans,  a statement from President Biden said Thursday.2,461 U.S. service members died and more than 20,000 were wounded in action during the war. You know, people want to thank me for his se stanley cup rvice. They need to know why he died. They need to pay attention to what s going on. And he was the best man I ever met. He was a man of honor, a man of i stanley taza ntegrity. He would do anything for anyone,  said Jane Horton, a senior policy adviser in Congress and  stanley cup a Gold Star wife.Her husband, U.S. Army Specialist Christopher Horton, was killed in Afghanistan. Horton traveled to Afghanistan several times, in both official and personal capacities. Going forward, I think it s important to have a nationwide reflection and conversation about how we do better, how we treat our allies, how we treat our partners, and how we win wars, because the next war is going to be a near peer war, it s not going to be a war against the third world country like Afghanistan,  Horton said.  We as a country need to have a nationwide reflection, we need to have a non-political, apolitical after-action review on what we Ajfj Biden to announce COVID-19 task force on Monday
 Researchers around the world are trying to learn as much as possible about COVID-19, while reaching for a vaccine, cure or other treatment. Some recent studies are looking at vaccines we already have in our arsenal. It has been known for years that some vaccines can offer protection against diseases that they re not targeting against. Pr stanley termosy obably the best example is the BCG vaccine, which is used to try to prevent tuberculosis. It can prevent people from acquiring malaria,  said Andrew Badley, the Chair of the Mayo Clinic COVID Research Task Force.Researchers have come up with theories as to why one vaccine would also protect against an entirely unrelated virus. Badley says the best theory is called immune training 鈥?t stanley cup hat is your body, in preparing to defend itself from one disease, unintentionally protects it from another. So, with that as our basis and understanding, we did a similar analysis here with our Mayo Clinic data. What we did is we compared the rates of test positivity for COVID between those who ve had vaccines and those who haven t had vaccines and stratifi stanley cup website ed that according to vaccine type,  explained Badley.What they found was that specifically, the MMR vaccines--which protects against measles mumps and rubella, as well as the flu vaccine and several others--had a protective effect against getting COVID-19. As for further implications for what this research could mean when it comes to COVID-19, Badley said,  certainly there will be numerous studies looking at all