A congressional panel on Friday
published its final report on the Covid-19 pandemic, highlighting the Trump
administration's "failed stewardship" and detailing how a
"persistent pattern of political interference undermined the nation's
ability to respond" to a crisis that has claimed more than a million lives
in the United States.
The House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis report notes
that "the United States was underprepared for a major public health crisis
for years before the coronavirus pandemic," and that "chronic
underfunding and long-standing health disparities put many Americans at
heightened risk of becoming infected and developing severe illness as a result
of the coronavirus."
"The Trump administration's reckless pandemic response
resulted in devastating and lasting harm," the Democrat-controlled
subcommittee contended. "The toll of the coronavirus fell hardest on those
who were already most vulnerable. Communities of color suffered
disproportionally high rates of coronavirus infection, hospitalization, and
death. Nursing home residents suffered high levels of infections and deaths,
exacerbated by understaffing and meager wages and benefits for their
workers."
The publication continues:
The
United States had long failed to invest in measures necessary to prepare for a
global pandemic, including failing to maintain the Strategic National Stockpile
and to adapt to indications that federal agencies were likely to be stymied by
a lack of cooperation and communication failures in the event of a major public
health calamity. These factors were exacerbated by the Trump administration's
disastrous initial response in 2020. The Trump administration failed to
recognize the looming threat as reports of a novel pathogen emerged in early
January and failed to take sufficient measures to prepare the country by
developing adequate testing or acquiring sufficient personal protective
equipment and other critical supplies.
The paper accuses high-ranking members of the Trump
administration, including advisers Peter Navarro and Dr. Steven Hatfill, of
waging a "knife fight" with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
over the immunosuppressive Covid-19 treatment hydroxychloroquine. According to
the report, Navarro and Hatfill relied upon advice from "known extremists
and prolific conspiracists like former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon,
Dr. Jerome Corsi, and the Association of 40 American Physicians and Surgeons,
which, among other radical conspiracies, propagated the theory that [former]
President Barack Obama used a covert form of hypnosis to win the 2008
presidential election."
In contrast, the report notes the "historic"
vaccination campaign launched during the tenure of President Joe Biden, an
effort resulting in 200 million vaccine doses administered in 100 days.
However, "the rampant spread of misinformation has led to
damaging distrust in public health expertise," while contributing "to
harassment, threats, and attacks on public health officials working on the
coronavirus response," the document adds. This misinformation
"convinced far too many Americans to decline lifesaving coronavirus
vaccines—resulting in hundreds of thousands of preventable deaths."
According to the
Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center, more than 99 million people have
contracted Covid-19 in the United States, and over 1,084,000 have died—more
than the population of San Jose, the nation's 10th-largest city.
The report also highlights the pandemic's economic toll,
including "20 million Americans losing their jobs in April 2020 alone,
pushing the unemployment rate from 2.5% to 14.7% in just two months."
"This devastation fell hardest on low-income workers and
their families, who were disproportionately women and people of color and were
more likely to work in hard-hit sectors that experienced closures and
disruptions," the paper states.
Rep. James Clyburn (D-S.C.), who chairs the subcommittee, said
in a statement that "as this
final report shows, in many instances, the Trump administration's poor
management of relief programs left them particularly vulnerable to waste,
fraud, and abuse. The report also lays out in detail how the previous
administration prioritized politics over public health in its pandemic
response, engaging in an unprecedented campaign to undermine federal agencies
responsible for protecting Americans' health and lives."
"I have emphasized during the select subcommittee's tenure
that our oversight work must ultimately be forward-looking; the coronavirus
crisis will not be the last public health emergency or economic crisis that we
confront," Clyburn added. "The report's recommendations, informed by
42 hearings and member briefings and 37 staff analyses, will ensure the nation
is better suited to face future threats while also enacting public health and
economic policies that will serve us well in good times as well as bad."
The report comes a few weeks before the GOP is set to take
control of the House and potentially end the subcommittee. According to Politico,
"Republicans are planning to spread their Covid-19 investigations across
multiple committees—largely focusing on the virus' origins and misspent
pandemic funds."
In response, Jeremy Funk, a spokesperson for the watchdog group
Accountable.US, warned that "when House Republicans wax indignant about
Covid aid abuse next year, it will be many days late and dollars short—and a
likely effort to deflect blame from the Trump administration where it
belongs."
-Common Dreams
Comment:
I documented this dangerous fool from December 31, 2019 to June 15, 2021: "American citizens are dying because of Trump’s reprehensible ignorance, egregious incompetence, intentional maliciousness, and pathological narcissism and lying! Where is your outrage?!"
https://teacherpoetmusicianglenbrown.blogspot.com/2020/03/dangerous-ignorance.html
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