Three Lawyers. Three Opinions. Endless Conversation.
Wednesday, March 10, 2021
THE PANDEMIC ISN’T OVER: KEEPING OUR EYES ON THE PRIZE
Despite much progress, a threat has appeared that could
derail solving the pandemic problem. That threat compels us to join those
sounding an alarm.
To some extent, the coronavirus pandemic has always been about numbers. We know many of the painful ones – 29.2
million infections
and 530,000 deaths by the first week in March; about 22
million jobs lost or diminished; 328.2 million (in other words, everybody)
lives disrupted. And now, another set of numbers offers hope for an end to the
madness – decreased cases, over 59 million people who’ve had at least one shot
of vaccine, maybe 255 million people (every adult in the country) vaccinated by
summer.
The problem lies in the fact states have started opening
their economies by lifting restrictions on capacity in public venues, making
social distancing harder, and eliminating mask requirements. It’s
a trickle
now, but it could soon become a flood. As one doctor warned,
don’t spike the football after making a few first downs, wait until you’re in
the end zone.
mask mandates and limits on occupancy in eating places and other
businesses, steps
already taken by Florida’s Republican governor, Ron DeSantis. GOP chief executives
in Iowa and Montana ended mask requirements in February. Republican governors
in Arkansas and Alabama said they’d suspend mask orders in late March and early
April, though that move in Arkansas depends on testing results and
hospitalizations.
One Democratic governor, Connecticut’s Ned Lamont, kept the mask requirement in place, but eliminated indoor
dining capacity limits. He also expanded how many people can attend sporting
events.
Different motives likely lay behind these moves, some
probably benign, some likely cynical, and some perhaps the result of citizen
pressure. Benign explanations included increasingvaccination rates and a declining number of infections. Continuing politicization
of the pandemic by former President Donald Trump and his allies made it likely some GOP governors simply sought
political favor with Trump supporters who never liked masks, social distancing,
and other anti-COVID 19 measures. Texas Governor Greg Abbott, in particular, wants to position himself for a presidential
run in 2024 and drew blowback from Texas Democrats who suspected a political
motive in his roll back order. These actions place political interests above
those of the citizenry.
We admit public pressure could affect some governors. Americans,
even those who support mask wearing and other anti-COVID 19 safety measures,
are tired of how the virus has disrupted their lives. They want a return to
normal, even despite evidence the fight isn’t over. We think such an attitude
equates to taking a cast off a broken leg before the bone heals because the
patient finds the cast inconvenient. In this instance, removing the cast could
have deadly consequences.
about the
trajectory of the pandemic, and added, “Now is not the time to relax critical
safeguards.” Other public health experts like Dr. Anthony Fauci also warned against prematurely discarding masks and social
distancing requirements.
A Personal Story
One of us, Rob, suffered a severe case of COVID 19 last fall,
spending five days in a hospital, three of them on oxygen, though not a
respirator. After a harrowing day of hallucinations (“I thought I was walking
on the ceiling,” he said), his condition dictated treatment with experimental drugs
and steroids. Almost as bad as the hospital time was the recovery. Unlike the
recovery from other illnesses in a life of almost seven decades, this recovery featured
not a smooth road back to good health but resembled a discomforting trek along
a jagged, uneven path littered with rocks and boulders. For every two steps
forward, the route required at least one backwards. For the better part of a
month after the hospital, nothing tasted good, not even water. The sense of
smell vanished. Yes, some people suffered mild forms of the illness, but no one
should underestimate the perils of even a moderate case. This isn’t the flu.
Rob’s advice: Do everything possible to avoid getting this disease.
A War Metaphor
After a vigorous discussion, we found
ourselves agreeing with Woodson’s label of
“irresponsible” for those who give in to
impatience and prematurely discard measures that health experts know stop the
spread of
COVID 19. He has a point that this is a war, as
the
infection and death numbers show. An army can’t quit before winning the war,
especially not with victory in sight, when a loss could decimate the entire
army.
Through the efforts of scientists, we
have vaccines that work. Thanks to now having a president who takes the issue
seriously, vaccine distribution works. The president says by the end of May
every adult American, about 255 million people, who wants a vaccination can get
one. That’s a real win. We can lose now only by giving the game away. No reason
exists for doing that. We can make the numbers work now.
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