“The 1918 influenza pandemic killed at least 50 million people across the world, including about 675,000 people in the United States. And yet, until recently, it has been elusive in our popular memory. America’s curious amnesia about the 1918 pandemic has come to mind lately as the United States appears to be shifting into a post-pandemic era of job growth and optimism. “A year ago today, I noted that
we were approaching 17,000 deaths from Covid-19. Now our official death count
is over 560,000. If anyone had told us a year ago that we would lose more
than a half million of our family and friends to this pandemic, that number
would have seemed unthinkable. And yet now, as more shots go into arms every
day, attention to the extraordinary toll of the past year seems to be
slipping. “Remembering the nation’s suffering
under the pandemic matters because the contrast between the disastrous last year
and our hope this spring is a snapshot of what is at stake in the fight over
control of the nation’s government. “Ever since President Ronald Reagan
declared in his 1981 inaugural address that ‘government is not the solution
to our problem; government is the problem,’ Republicans have argued that the
best way to run the country has been to dismantle the federal government and
turn the fundamental operations of the country over to private enterprise.
They have argued that the government is inefficient and wasteful, while
businesses can pivot rapidly and are far more efficient than their government
counterparts. “And then the coronavirus came. “The president put his son-in-law,
Jared Kushner, in charge of the nation’s response to the pandemic. Kushner
sidelined career officials who knew how to source medical supplies, for
example, in favor of young volunteers from investment banks and consulting
firms. The administration touted what its leaders called an innovative
public-private partnership to respond to the country’s needs, but a report
from Representative Katie Porter (D-CA) documented that as late as March
2, the administration was urging American businesses to take advantage of the
booming market in personal protective equipment (PPE) to export masks,
ventilators, and PPE to other countries. Porter’s office examined export
records to show that in February 2020, ‘the value of U.S. mask exports
to China was 1094% higher than the 2019 monthly average.’ Meanwhile, American
health care providers were wearing garbage bags, and people were sewing their
own masks. “As the contours of the crisis
became clearer in late March, business leaders turned to Kushner to provide
national direction. He told them: ‘The federal government is not going to
lead this response…. It’s up to the states to figure out what they want to
do.’ When one leader told him the states were bidding against each other for
PPE and driving prices up, he responded: ‘Free markets will solve this…. This
is not the role of government.’ “Meanwhile, Trump’s trade adviser
Peter Navarro was so worried about the administration’s failure to buy
critical medical supplies that he undertook to find them himself, haphazardly
committing more than $1 billion of federal money to invest in drugs and
supplies. Among other things, he bypassed normal procurement chains and
arranged for a loan for Eastman Kodak, a company known for its work in the
process of photography, to produce drugs to fight the pandemic. (The
company’s stock price jumped from about $2 to $60 a share upon the news of
the deal, and the loan was put on hold. Navarro called Eastman Kodak
executives ‘stupid’). “As infections and deaths continued
to mount, the administration repeatedly downplayed the emergency. Today we
learned that by May, science adviser Paul Alexander and his boss, Michael
Caputo, the assistant secretary for public affairs at Health and Human
Services, were working to change the language officials at the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention used to warn of the dangers of the disease. ‘I
know the President wants us to enumerate the economic cost of not reopening.
We need solid estimates to be able to say something like: 50,000 more cancer
deaths! 40,000 more heart attacks! 25,000 more suicides!’ Caputo wrote to
Alexander on May 16. “By July, Alexander was calling for
the administration to adopt a strategy of herd immunity, simply letting the
disease wash over the country. ‘Infants, kids, teens, young people, young
adults, middle aged with no conditions etc. have zero to little risk….so we
use them to develop herd…we want them infected,’ he wrote to Caputo. “In keeping with the theory that the
federal government had no role to play in combatting the pandemic, as the
fall progressed and it appeared there might be a workable vaccine by 2021,
the Trump administration made no plan for federal distribution of the
vaccine. It figured it would simply deliver the vaccine to the states, which
could make their own arrangements to get it into people. The states, though,
were badly strapped for money either to advertise or to deliver the shots. “Infections surged terrifyingly
after November until by late January, when Trump left the White House, new
infections had reached about 250,000 a day and about 3000 people were dying
of Covid-19 daily. With 170 deaths for every 100,000 Americans, the U.S.
outstrips every other country in the world for the devastation of this disease.
(Brazil, with 159 deaths for every 100,000 people, is second.) “In contrast to Trump, President
Biden has used the pandemic to show what the federal government can do right.
The night before he took office, he held a memorial for the Americans who had
died in the pandemic. Once in the White House, he dedicated the federal
government to ending the scourge. On January 21, he issued a national
strategy for responding to the crisis that began by declaring ‘the federal
government should be the source of truth for the public to get clear,
accessible, and scientifically accurate information about COVID-19.’ “He begged Americans to wear masks,
used the federal Defense Production Act to get supplies, got money to states
and cities, bought vaccines, and poured money into the infrastructure that
would get the vaccines into arms. As of today, the U.S. is averaging 3
million shots a day, and a third of the population has received at least one
dose of a vaccine. Twenty percent of us are fully vaccinated, including 60%
of those 65 and older. “Cases of infection are dropping to
about 66,000 cases a day-- well below the January surge but still high. The
arrival of new, highly contagious variants continues to threaten worrisome
spikes, but we are not, so far, facing the sort of crisis that Brazil is,
where right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro opposes a lockdown, arguing that
the damage a lockdown would do to the economy would be worse than letting the
virus run its course. Hospitals in Brazil are overwhelmed, and this week more
than 4,000 people died in 24 hours for the first time since the pandemic
began. Meanwhile, the vaccine rollout in Brazil has been slow. “In America, the two very different
responses to the pandemic have given us a powerful education in government
activism. ‘For the past year, we couldn’t rely on the federal government to
act with the urgency and focus and coordination we needed,’ Biden said, ‘And
we have seen the tragic cost of that failure….’ “As time moves forward, if we really
do get into the clear, it is entirely possible that the 2020 pandemic will
fade into the same sort of vagueness that the 1918 pandemic did. But what it
has taught us about government is important to remember” (Heather Cox
Richardson). Notes: https://www.cdc.gov/flu/pandemic-resources/1918-pandemic-h1n1.html https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2021/03/31/navarro-pandemic-supply-contracts-trump/ https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2020/09/jared-kushner-let-the-markets-decide-covid-19-fate https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/16/trump-appointee-demanded-herd-immunity-strategy-446408 https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2021/04/09/cdc-covid-political-interference/ https://www.cnbc.com/2021/04/09/covid-19-cases-deaths-vaccinations-daily-update.html |
This enrages me.
ReplyDeleteThe Cult of Trump continues unabated as 40% of our Armed Forces and Police refuse Covid inoculations. The millions of anti-mask and anti-vaccine true-believers are proof of Nietzsche's comment, "Madness is something rare in individuals - but in groups, parties, nations and ages, it is the rule."