There is a cost/benefit analysis in opening up the country in the midst of a pandemic. Donald Trump (R-now of FL) and Governor Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) both acknowledge it. We’re dealing with a risk assessment. The more people go out, the greater the risk. So the logical person would be engaged in what is known as risk mitigation.
But because the people in the United States seem to live in different realities, this has become very difficult. As an editorial in Axios noted: “Far from being the unifying force other catastrophes have been, the COVID-19 pandemic is tearing a divided America — and world — further apart.”
Former President George W. Bush released a video urging national unity in fighting this coronavirus pandemic. “Let us remember how small our differences are in the face of this shared threat… We rise or fall together, and we are determined to rise.” While I personally applauded the effort of someone I never voted for, it wasn’t universally appreciated. The tweeter-in-chief, for instance, whined that W should have spoken up to defend him during the impeachment event.
Mask averse
Governor Mike DeWine (R-OH) has been a reasonable voice in this discussion. He has recommended masks, but won’t require them because he says it goes too far for his citizenry. Also in Ohio, a lawmaker refuses to wear a mask because God?
Stillwater, OK rescinded its mask requirement because of the pushback. And a restaurant in Texas FORBIDS masks being worn by their employees.
I understand the tension between being safe and going back to normal, between complete lockdown and or doing nothing at all. Perhaps the restrictions have made people crazy. In what civilized society does someone wipe his nose on an employee’s shirt? Or push someone into a fountain? Or shoot someone in the head? The victims’ crimes? Asking people to engage in physical distancing behavior such as wearing a mask! A couple of teenage employees were shot because the McDonald’s dining room was closed. We’re in screwed-up territory. And we’re screwing ourselves.
I had foolishly, it appears, believed that when people went out, they would engage in appropriate social distancing and take reasonable precautions. Pictures of crowded beaches belie that theory. Polling suggests that many people rejected the number of the sick and the dead, including a significant one. They certainly dismiss as untrue projections a month out. Perhaps, as a result, anywhere between a sixth and one-third of the populace are already deciding not to get a vaccine when it becomes available.
Like it’s 2016
The Boston Globe reports that it’s memes, text chains, and online conspiracies that have fueled coronavirus protesters and discord. This is similar to what took place in 2016. “Only this time, the online manipulation campaigns… could be deadly.”
We can have disagreements about what’s the appropriate course of action. My friend David Brickman makes a modest proposal about New York’s reopening. “Where will art museums and galleries fit into this plan?” He thinks they should be among the first businesses to reopen, in part because many small museums or galleries could easily maintain social distancing protocols.
But these are not just differences of opinion I’m seeing in America. It’s nearly civil war at a time when we should have a common enemy, COVID-19. We’ll see very soon how the virus is winning, and we’re all losing.
More COVID Linkage
CDC Guidance for Reopening Is Deep-Sixed by the White House.
More Cases Among Viewers Of Fox News Host Who Downplayed Pandemic.
Not An Emergency Once He Found Out Who Was Dying.
How He Left the Country Dangerously Unprepared.
To understand the danger of outbreaks in meatpacking plants, look at the industry’s history.
Does Anyone Still Want to Be a Doctor?
A Guide to Reading Facial Expressions Behind Protective Masks.
‘Sadness’ and Disbelief From a World Missing American Leadership.
How to Avoid Burnout in the Middle of a Pandemic.
7 Ways Travel Will Change for the Better in a Post-Pandemic World
Read NOTES FROM THE PANDEMIC.
I’m sad and lonesome and starting to dream about places I can’t go and things I can’t do (I had a dream the other night about going to a quilt shop) but I also recognize my incredible good fortune in that I can stay mostly home for the next 3 1/2 or so months (and maybe past that, if my uni decides that it’s not safe to go back to in-person classes yet).
I figure: I can’t count on anyone else to keep me safe, so I have to do it. And right now, I do that by going out to the grocery once a week at most, and pretty much nowhere else. (Am going to the counselor but she takes this super seriously, and disinfects doorknobs/office/stays at least 6′ from me/I wear a mask). I MIGHT, if cases aren’t spiking in a couple weeks, go to an open-air garden center for some plants because I need something to make me happy.
But yeah. This just makes me realize how alone I am in all of this and how I can’t count on people – to quote Agent K, a person is smart, people are dumb panicky animals. And even at that, some individual people feel like they should not even be minorly inconvenienced for the good of another human.
I suspect once it’s “safe” to go out again it’s going to be VERY hard for me to start again, remembering all of this. I had already mostly gotten restaurant meals as carry out because I hate sitting alone in a restaurant, that will just continue, I guess.
I think most of the blame for the virus tearing us apart belongs to the top. If we had a genuine leader, taking the country through this (not to mention that the problem would have been a lot less if it had been acted upon in January), we wouldn’t be seeing a lot of these frightening protests and Facebook posts (the ones regarding Gretchen Whitmer are especially frightening and disgusting). It’s the normalizing of hate under 45 and to some extent the normalizing of “it’s all about me” that Ronald Reagan did such a good job on instilling in the American people that has screwed so many things up.