Audio By Carbonatix
For two hours, President Donald Trump got his "miracle" -- the pandemic did just disappear -- in the false reality of the Republican National Convention.
Then the first lady strode into her newly renovated White House Rose Garden.
Melania Trump immediately shared the kind of heartfelt empathy for victims of the worst health crisis in a century that her husband has rarely offered and which the personality pageant that is nominating him for a second term largely ignored.

She offered her gratitude to first responders, nurses and doctors who have cared for Americans sickened by the virus, and attested to her husband's concern for all those afflicted by it.
She also attempted to humanize the President at a time when he is facing a huge deficit with female voters.
"My deepest sympathy goes out to everyone who has lost a loved one and my prayers are with those who are ill or suffering. I know many people are anxious and some feel helpless. I want you to know you are not alone," she said.
The direct reference to the virus was notable since earlier speakers, if they mentioned the virus at all, portrayed it as a vanquished threat.
In the Covid-free biosphere of the Trump show, the economy roared like it did during Ronald Reagan's "morning in America," an anti-immigrant President was swearing in new citizens and pardoning a reformed criminal after a year in which he has vilified peaceful demonstrators as thugs.
Outside, in the real world, more than 1,200 Americans died from the virus on Tuesday, bringing the tragic total close to 180,000 amid new warnings that the consequent recession will be long and crushing.
A reminder of some practical ways to keep our families safe and healthy. pic.twitter.com/vLWGMLgXFD
— Melania Trump (@FLOTUS) April 28, 2020
The pandemic, which Republicans have done their best to gloss over during the convention, has destroyed hopes of a return to classes for millions of school kids and unemployment remains above 10%.
Yet one of the President's top economic advisers Larry Kudlow spoke about the economy as if it was already in the middle of a prolonged expansion.
He also implied the virus was in the rear-view mirror though new hotspots are popping up and scientist warn that a public health nightmare may loom in the fall.
"It was awful, hardship and heartbreak were everywhere," Kudlow said, in the latest premature White House indication that the crisis was over.

While the first lady's compassion was touching, it also fulfilled a political purpose, since she pledged that "Donald will not rest until he has done all he can to take care of everyone impacted by this terrible pandemic.
"It will now be harder for critics to say that the convention has totally ignored the pandemic and Trump's supporters may take heart from signs that the White House believes the crisis is under control.
In reality, the President's declarations about the virus -- that it would not threaten the US, that it was time to re-open businesses and gatherings early this spring and that a national testing operation was unnecessary were consistently wrong.
Latest Stories
-
Next Steps: Victory on reparatory justice is on the horizon – Ablakwa
17 minutes -
We do not seek to reopen old wounds – Mahama declares at Next Steps Conference
21 minutes -
Mahama sets up three global panels for addressing issues of reparations
26 minutes -
¢300m won’t cut it – Buffer Stock CEO says Ghana needs ¢1.5bn to secure food reserves
33 minutes -
Oil falls as supply starts moving through Strait of Hormuz
51 minutes -
Mexico become first country to qualify for World Cup last 32
1 hour -
Liverpool sign Munoz and offer ÂŁ86m for Diomande
1 hour -
Tuchel throws first pitch as England enjoy downtime
1 hour -
Canada thrash nine-man Qatar but Marsch in tears over Kone injury
2 hours -
US CDC activates $107 million in emergency funding for Ebola response
4 hours -
IMF greenlights new $211 million climate funding for Sierra Leone
5 hours -
Congo says number of confirmed Ebola cases rises to 896
5 hours -
Cholera death toll in northeast Nigeria rises to 90, UN says
5 hours -
Zimbabwe’s ‘Crocodile’ leader makes another move to consolidate power
5 hours -
US court rules Ohio can restrict children’s use of social media
5 hours