First, full
disclosure. My wife is an ICU nurse, and she is thus on the front lines of this
pandemic. I would be lying if I said I wasn’t worried for her safety, and for
the wellbeing of my family. I don’t think those outside of the medical
profession understand what a major pandemic means for people like us. For the
most part, the people I will be quoting in this post are white, privileged, and
not at risk. So I find it particularly disturbing when they spread both
misinformation and - as I will note - veiled threats.
***
While most
of my friend list these days are rational people who accept science, seek the
common good, and so on, there has been an increasingly troubling trend among my
right-leaning acquaintances to take, um, interesting positions on things,
particularly those in which the actions of a certain president (or party) might
be seen in a bad light. This week, I saw a few posts which I left alone because
I had no interest in getting into a fight, but that have really made me think
and consider exactly what is going on here. I decided to write a bit about
them, and why I think they are seriously problematic. Let’s start with one
which is a 100% partisan issue.
“We need to be honest and
call it the Chinese/Wuhan Virus.”
This one
comes directly from The Toupee Who Shall Not Be Named and his white nationalist
advisers, but the GOP in general seems to be pushing this. There are several
problems with this, so let me work through them one at a time.
#1: It
openly encourages racism and xenophobia
Il Toupee,
pretty obviously, has a worldview which says that bad things come from “those
people,” meaning non-Americans in general, but particularly people with darker
skin. This has been obvious throughout his life, but on full display from the
beginning of his campaign. In the most recent speech, he pushed (AGAIN!) for
his wall, and blamed other countries. So, at minimum, this is part of a
calculated play to rile up Trump’s xenophobic base - and stir up xenophobia and
support for xenophobic policies.
But it’s
more than that in practice. Chinese (and other Asian) restaurants have seen
business dry up. Incidents of hate and hate crimes against Asian Americans has
increased. (I have a few friends who have experienced this first hand.) So this
isn’t just of academic interest. It is an obstacle to seeing a pandemic virus
as something we all have to come together and solve. If we are focusing on
blaming the “other,” we miss an opportunity to collaborate.
This has
been obvious in the US response to the pandemic: refusing WHO tests, excluding
foreign nationals while failing to screen citizens, and insisting until
recently that the whole thing was a Chinese and Democrat hoax.
#2: It
misses that the virus could have originated anywhere
Throughout
recorded history, viruses have jumped from animal species to humans. This is
well documented. But even more than that, our very DNA shows strong evidence of
cross-species transfer dating back to the rise of mammals.
This is something that we humans have dealt with and will continue to deal with
because it is fundamental to how life on earth works. Anywhere there is
human/animal contact, viruses will jump.
Not only
that, but our modern situation makes this even more likely. As habitat
destruction occurs, animals are forced into contact with humans. Likewise, as
humans push into former wilderness, contact occurs. Climate change will also
stir things up by changing ranges for various species, bringing them into
contact with each other - and us.
#3: It
obfuscates the frightening parallels between China’s mistakes and ours
Trump fans -
and Republicans in general - seem unwilling to see or admit the similarities
between China and the United States. The whole “China is Communist, we are
Capitalist, so we never make the same mistakes” is a strong ideology. Although
beyond the scope of this post, China is far more capitalist than the American
Right realizes. It is just unusual in that it is both totalitarian AND
capitalist, which is a combination we are not used to. But it also makes the
grave error to think that it is China’s Communist traits which were at fault.
Rather, it was more broadly human failings - and the failings of a
certain kind of politician specifically - that were at fault.
Let’s look
at the factors here that led to this:
Lack of
regulations for food safety and animal contact
We need to
be honest about this. Not too long ago, the US was every bit as vulnerable.
(Read things like Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle for more on this.)
But how much
better are we? As a nation, our methods of raising meat are pretty lax compared
to, say, Japan, or most of Europe. We have tens of thousands of animals crammed
into tiny cages and kept in unsanitary conditions. We are an accident waiting
to happen ourselves.
Historically
speaking, the most common nexus between humans and animals for disease has been
poultry and pigs. And guess what? Which animals are raised in the factory farm
way here in the US? That’s right: poultry and pigs. So it was really just chance
(and the fact that China is a huge place with a lot of people) that led
to this coming from China. It could easily have started here.
And let’s
also be honest about this: The GOP and Trump have been working to roll back
regulations - including food safety regulations. So they are actually making it
more likely that the next pandemic will originate here.
Political
suppression of information
It is
absolutely true that China suppressed information about the outbreak. It is
also true that this was done for political purposes - to keep the Dear Leader
from bad news. It is also true that China punished a whistleblower.
It is also
absolutely true that Trump did the same thing.
That’s the problem with autocratic narcissists in power. Regardless of the
economic or political system, they act in a predictable manner. When pandemics
are involved, this causes problems.
Republicans
need to stop with this “blame China” thing and take a hard introspective look
at how their policies, and their own Dear Leader are problematic and
counterproductive in dealing with a pandemic.
#3: It
misses a lesson of history
Have you
heard of the “Spanish Flu”? Yeah, probably. That was our last deadly global
pandemic, about 100 years ago. But did you know that the Spanish Flu did NOT
originate in Spain?
That’s
right:
The
Spanish Flu did not originate in Spain.
The reason
it is associated with Spain is that during World War One, Spain was a neutral
country. Because of that, it had no incentive to suppress information about the
flu, but openly reported infections and deaths. Unlike countries like the
United States, Britain, France, Germany, and so on. They suppressed information
because if they reported deaths, it might encourage the enemy.
There are
several hypotheses as to where the Spanish Flu originated. Some have proposed a
British military base in France during the war. Others think Chinese laborers
may have brought it. But there is also the possibility that it came from...wait
for it...Kansas. A military base in Kansas. There is no definitive evidence, in
part because we didn’t have tests, and much evidence wasn’t public at the
time.
In any
event, the important thing here isn’t exactly where it originated as the fact
that it could plausibly have originated anywhere - but the country that first
went public got the blame.
So, in
summary, insistence on blaming China for the pandemic is counterproductive. It
encourages racism and xenophobia, it ignores the common risk factors that the
US shares, discourages collaboration, and misses the lessons of history.
“The CDC is lying: the
death rate is actually really low.”
There are
some variants on this one, but the common thread seems to be the idea that the
REAL problem is that this is being blown out of proportion, is not really a big
deal, and that we should just go on with business as usual. Related to this is
conspiratorial thinking that some combination of China/Democrats/the Media want
to hurt Trump, and thus manufactured a crisis to tank the economy.
Frankly,
this is troubling.
Let me
tackle a few of the claims to show what is going on here.
Because
we haven’t tested that many people, the death rate is artificially high
It is true
that we have tested very few people here in the US. This is actually really
troubling to medical professionals and scientists, because it means that we
likely have a ticking time bomb of infected people out there.
Here is why
the experts believe the death rate is actually a lot higher than the flu: there
are countries who HAVE tested extensively, and have a pretty good idea about
the rates.
It is one
thing to say China is still lying. (It’s plausible, although not certain.) It
is another to say that ALL of the following countries are lying:
South
Korea: has tested far more people by percentage of population than any
other. It has also been successful at containing the outbreak by testing,
tracing contact, and quarantines. Because of this, it has a huge body of
evidence of the rates of serious complications and fatalities. South Korea is
also a free country, and has no incentive to fabricate a pandemic. Also,
because the US is a big trade partner, why would it try to destroy the US
economy?
Taiwan:
also has mostly contained things through testing, quarantine, and tracing. Also
no friend of China, and depends on the US.
Iran: has
credibility problems, but it seems unlikely that it would fabricate a deadly
pandemic in its own country. Also, we have satellite photos of mass graves. It
seems like a stretch.
Italy: In
order to believe this is a hoax, you MUST believe that Italy is lying. That it
doesn’t in fact have a healthcare infrastructure stretched past the breaking
point, with some patients going without care, an overwhelmed funeral industry,
and a high death rate. Why would Italy do that? It has no particular hate for
the US, it is a free country, and no big friend of China.
Spain: is
in much the same place as Italy, with a disturbingly high death rate, and a
higher testing rate than the US. Why would Spain be lying?
Great
Britain: is arguably our closest ally, has a similarly incompetent and
racist goofus as a leader, and is certainly not Communist. And yet, Britain too
is showing a troubling infection and death rate, and is prepared for worse. Why
would Britain be lying about that?
So, to
believe that this is somehow just an overblown media panic, you have to believe
that ALL of these countries are in on the conspiracy. Really?
And now, the
most troubling of all:
“If this turns out to be
overblown, people need to be held accountable.”
This one was
shocking to me to hear, particularly from a legal colleague who should know
better.
I mean, WHO
is he saying should be “held accountable” and how?
Are we
talking about suing the scientists who warned us? That’s the sort of thing that
happens in totalitarian countries, not free democracies with free speech
rights. Scientists should be free to give warning where they believe it is
appropriate. And, in fact, this has been an ongoing issue with the Right, which
is determined to discount any science that gets in the way of profit. From
environmental regulation to climate change. I am concerned that the Right would
prefer us to be more like China, where everything - including science -
is expected to serve the regime and corporate interests.
Also, let’s
say that our drastic action actually works, and we shut down this pandemic. Do
we punish the scientists because their advice worked? I mean, it’s hard to tell
the difference between successful action and unnecessary action. (Although, you
could look at the difference between South Korea and Italy in the
actions and their results…)
Okay, so
maybe we don’t sue or prosecute scientists for this. Do we sue the media?
Again, this
is what totalitarian regimes do. Not free democracies. But, again, note that
Trump thinks (like totalitarians throughout history) that the press is “the
enemy of the people.” That isn’t surprising. But to hear so-called
conservatives argue for “holding the press accountable” is chilling.
Again, let’s
be honest about what this means in practice. We would be punishing the press
for truthfully reporting what other countries are saying. (See above.) We would
be punishing the press for reporting what scientists are saying. We would be
punishing the press for failing to suppress information that is economically
inconvenient. Think about that for a moment.
Okay, so
maybe we don’t punish the press. Maybe we just punish the elected officials who
shut down schools and restaurants.
This is at
least not as politically chilling. We can vote out anyone we don’t like, and
that is fine in the political sense.
But think of
this too: if a governor (or county government) makes a decision based on the
scientific and medical information he or she has, why does that warrant
punishment? Would we really prefer that all decisions be made based on the
economy and the stock market? This is a lose-lose for elected officials and
other decision makers. A pandemic doesn’t have a good result possible - either you leave everything open
and let the disease spread or you shut things down and cause hardship.
If given the choice, I would prefer that our leaders defer to science in areas
in which science has the necessary information. I would certainly trust medical
and epidemiological experts to have better advice than investment bankers when
it comes to pandemics. And certainly more than a willfully ignorant narcissist
who has a “gut feeling.”
So, summary:
it is unlikely that a dozen other countries are just making stuff up. This shit
is real, and should be treated accordingly. And let’s stop already with talk of
punishing the whistleblowers. That’s crazy, totalitarian talk, and is
inappropriate in a democracy.
We have a
rough road ahead of us (particularly my wife and others on the front lines.)
Let’s not make it worse with denialism, xenophobia, and calls to punish those
trying to limit the damage.
"Do we sue the media?"
ReplyDeleteThe Trump campaign just informed the major news networks that if they don't pull an ad that the Toupee finds politically inconvenient (it's one using his own words against a chart of the rising infection numbers in the US), he's going to have the FCC pull their broadcasting licenses. He can't legally do that, but at this point I don't think he cares; the Republicans declared him above the law, so he's doing to do whatever he wants.