“I look at it; I view it as, in
a sense, a wartime president. I mean, that's what we're fighting”.
Donald J. Trump, March 18th,
2020
“This is a wartime undertaking”.
President Joe Biden, January 21st,
2021
There have been few areas
of agreement between Biden and Trump. But they both agree, fighting the Coronavirus is like war.
In every war there are combatants. Some are more essential
and more vulnerable than others. This war is no different. Like other wars the risks have not
been borne equally. Those who earn their
living primarily by moving
words and numbers around on paper can work from
home. Office computers were moved home and Zoom became the thing for holding
meetings, conferences, and even prosecuting legal proceedings.
We think that no combatants have been more essential or more
vulnerable than
our essential health care workers. They have gone into battle
daily since the outbreak of the Coronavirus to take care of our infected loved
ones and
comfort them while they suffered and often died, because we could not
be at their bedsides. They often worked for minimum wages.
been
disproportionately affected, accounting for about 65% of deaths. The deaths continue.
Some of these workers worked in plants, in crowded conditions
that didn’t permit social distancing. The food industry offered
one prime example. Workers in meat processing plants, especially, suffered high
rates of infection and death from the disease.
Bearing a Heavier
Burden
Many home health providers care for multiple patients, who also
bear the consequences of
their work conditions. “If you think about perfect
vectors for transmission, unprotected individuals going from house to house
have to rank at the top of the list,” said Nina Kohn, a professor specializing in civil rights law at Syracuse
University, quoted in the KHN report.
Nonetheless,
caregivers like Samira, in Richmond, Virginia, identified in the KHN report, have
little choice but to work. Samira — who makes $8.25 an hour with one client and
$9.44 an hour with another, and owes tens of thousands of dollars in hospital
bills from previous work injuries — has no other option but to risk getting
sick.
“I can’t
afford not to work. And my clients, they don’t have anybody but me,” she said.
“So I just pray every day I don’t get it.”
From Despair to Hope
When we came to understand the deadly nature of the Coronavirus, the nation
faced a calamity like few it had
experienced in its 250-year history. The
country shut down and the health care workers on the front line faced the grim
task of continuing to treat thousands of people for a disease, medical experts
knew little about. We had no drugs proven effective against the virus. Since it
was airborne, people
caught it easily from other people. In many cases, the
consequences were deadly. Those health care workers found themselves hooking
people up to ventilators, knowing their patients would often die anyway. They
did so because it was their job.
Worse than the lack of effective treatments was the fact
there was no vaccine that could keep people from getting the disease. The only
tools for prevention were masks, hand washing, and “social distancing.”
Vaccine and Hope
Federal agencies began approving vaccines
for use in the United States in late
November/early December of 2020. Unfortunately, the federal government didn’t
have a distribution plan and left most of the work to the states. Predictably,
inoculations lagged in the early months of vaccine availability. That changed with the beginning of the Biden
administration. The new president made
vaccination a high national priority. He set a goal of 100 million shots
administered by the end of his first 100 days in office. His team met that goal
by day 58. The goal now is sufficient vaccine supply by May for every American
who wants it. We can all now see hope.
The national experience with Covid-19
has
shown some encouraging traits in the American character. Yes, we have
endured senseless selfishness born of partisan bickering, but when faced with
adversity, Americans have risen to the challenge.
Who can forget those inspiring scenes
in March, April, and May of 2020 of people
standing on their balconies saluting
front line health care workers during shift changes? Such expressions of
support now occupy a special place in American lore, joining the spontaneous
expressions of patriotism that sprang up after the September 11, 2001, attacks.
Now, with hope and optimism that
maybe, just maybe normal appears in sight, we take a few moments and review
where we’ve been and where we’re going, from the perspective of the people
who’ve borne the brunt of fighting the war
on the pandemic
Coronavirus. The vaccines
now available provide real hope, especially for the people who’ve led the fight
against the devastation this virus has wrought.
Many front-line workers are now dead,
leavingbehind
husbands, wives, children,
grandchildren, siblings and loved ones from whom
they were taken tragically and some often too soon, or have survived but suffer
long term medical consequences.
Is simply expressing our heartfelt gratitude enough? Rep. Norma Torres (D-Calif.) referenced the KHN data citing
the need for a pending
bill that would provide compensation to the families of health care workers who died or sustained harm from COVID-19.
We believe
these combatants deserve the same treatment veterans who bore the brunt of the
burdens of wars received - special benefits for their sacrifice.
Ordinarily, we wouldn’t post about an
Oprah Winfrey
interview with British royals. We concern
ourselves, though, with
issues that reflect what’s happening in society and that people care about. Seventeen
million viewers watched the recent CBS
interview, American television’s second largest non-sporting event audience this
year. Eleven million people in the United Kingdom saw the interview. So, Winfrey’s interview
with Prince Harry
and his wife, Meghan
Markle, caught our attention. The interview left the royal family with
tough questions that deserve answers. Buckingham Palace
put out a statement a few days later saying the royal family would address the
issues the interview raised “privately.”
The interview left many disappointed and feeling the western world lost
another opportunity for putting racial animus behind us.
contemplate suicide. She said she reached out for help with her
mental distress but was told she shouldn’t expect assistance. She said royal
family members didn’t want her then unborn son holding a title or having the
security arrangements royals typically receive. Unidentified family members
expressed “concerns” about how dark his skin might be. Markle and her husband
wouldn’t say who raised the “concerns,” though
Harry denied it was either of
his grandparents, Queen
Elizabeth II or her husband, the ailing Prince Philip.
Rampant speculation about who it was consumed the British and American media.
The UK and the One Drop
Rule
From the time Harry and Meghan began
dating in
2016, British tabloids were fascinated (repulsed?) by the idea of an
English royal involved in a romance with a person of color. Some weren’t nice
about it. Meghan almost certainly carries more white than black ancestry. Her
father, Thomas
Markle,
is a white man. The world views her mother, Doria Ragland, as black,
though her skin tone and other features suggest some European ancestry. Meghan,
therefore, in the eyes of many, is black because of the “one drop rule.”
In
order to prevent the offspring of enslaved women and white masters from
claiming inheritance rights through their biological fathers,
many American states enforced two provisions in probate and family law. First, children carried the racial status of
their mothers. Second, the presence of any black ancestry made a person legally
black – the one drop rule.
England never had such laws, but the custom apparently
followed Meghan into her relationship with Harry. Seemingly that view held sway
with some members of the royal family who weren’t hesitant about expressing
themselves.
Meghan’s distress has now caused all kinds ofproblems. The British Commonwealth
includes nations with lots of people of color. Many embraced Meghan. For them,
the royal family’s behavior has been a supreme disappointment and bolstered the
push in some countries for ending ties with the monarchy.
Is This Really
Happening?
“Concern” about the
skin color of a royal family member’s child in the 21st century indicates
the world hasn’t changed as much as we might have hoped. It may mean Britain has
racial problems not much different from those in the United States. The
controversy suggests Meghan and Harry’s marriage now represents a lost
opportunity.
Interracial marriage
isn’t unusual anymore. The statistics tell a clear enough story. Rates of intermarriage among blacks in the
United States doubled between 1980 and 2010
and keep rising. Beyond the numbers, just watch television or shop in a bookstore.
Interracial couples and their children appear in commercials for banks, food
products, cars, skin disease treatments, furniture, even erectile dysfunction
medications. Novels about interracial romances flood bookstore shelves.
Perhaps the idea of a British royal in an interracial marriage was too much, despite changing attitudes. As a friend of one of us
says about the royal family and its notions of what’s acceptable and what’s
not, the royals follow a rule that says, “That’s different!”
Mason,
provided the featured music. We thought the inclusivity of the wedding portended
a more tolerant era, one that could help England and the everyone else put
racial animus further in the rear-view mirror.
The mistreatment Meghan received, behavior that led her and
Harry to flee the United Kingdom for
California and life outside the royal bubble, suggests the bright promise of a new
world we saw was an illusion. Things haven’t changed as we thought. The British
have their own version of the racial insensitivity and backward thinking we see
so much of in the United States.
Perhaps there’s no reason for surprise. We wondered how that 2018
ceremony struck some members of the royal family. One of us got a text from a
relative wondering if the wedding “stretched British stiff upper lips to their
snapping point.” Now it appears those
fears may have been realized. Perhaps the way the wedding --- and the marriage
itself – struck some royals was a version of the idea another of our friends
expresses when he sees white people unhappy about some indicator of racial
progress. He exclaims, “We can’t have that!”
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.
Many Americans couldn’t help noticing the incongruity between
the recent landing of a powerful rover on Mars while millions of Texans struggled with freezing homes, burst water
pipes, and disruptions in supplies of food and other commodities. We note the
Mars landing was a project of the federal government, while the disaster in
Texas resulted from policies of the state government.
The Texas catastrophe drew our interest because one of us
lives there and we found the suffering of so many of our fellow citizens revolting. More than 50 people died at last count. That’s
unacceptable, given our understanding of why it happened. Like the toll from the pandemic, much suffering could have been avoided with a more
compassionate, attentive government focused on human needs.
Republicans capitalized on social
and racial issues in getting lower and middle income whites to vote against
their economic interests to the benefit of big business. That’s a lot of what
caused the Texas disaster. For years, Texas Republicans, in the pockets of the
fossil fuel industry and utility interests, neglected imposing regulations that
could have prevented the equipment failures that caused the electrical system
breakdowns. These politicians, preaching the gospel of deregulation,
didn’t heed warnings from a decade ago that electrical generating facilities in
Texas needed weatherization. The power producers preferred not
spending the money and politicians
didn’t make them do it. They
insulated themselves by harping on culture-based issues that kept the majority
of Texans voting Republican.
Texas operates its own electric grid which serves about 80 per cent of the state. The federal
government doesn’t regulate that grid.
Texas, therefore, can’t access electricity from neighboring states in an
emergency.
When the freeze occurred, Republican
heavyweights like former
Governor Rick Perry, energy secretary in the Trump administration, advanced the suggestion Texans
would trade a few more days without electricity so they could avoid federal
regulation. Rob and other Texas residents said, “Speak for yourself, Mr.
Secretary.”
Rob’s Take from the Ground
I’m not a native Texan
(like Henry and Woodson I was born and grew up in Arkansas), but I’ve lived here
40 years and consider it home. Though I’m proud of my University of Texas
degrees and the fact three of my children were born here, I’m not proud of the
brain-dead politics that created this disaster. Our state’s political leaders
apparently care more about protecting corporate interests that fund their
campaigns than about the welfare of ordinary citizens who found themselves
burning their own furniture in sometimes futile attempts to stay warm.
I
should say that my partner and I got off easy. We didn’t lose power. Thanks to
her decision a few years ago to switch to weather resistant pipes, our water
supply remained intact. But I have reason for anger. The three of my children
who live in Texas suffered through a good portion of the four-day emergency
with little electricity or water. They got the full brunt of the misery and the
blame lies squarely on state leadership.
harbors 2024 presidential ambitions, went on Fox News during the tragedy and blamed the problems on the fact wind turbines and
some solar facilities failed. He said that showed howAmerica would fare with the Green New Deal.
Republican legislators called for more emphasis on fossil
fuels. All that was disinformation.
Texas gets about ten per cent of its electricity from renewables like wind and solar. The shortfall went way beyond that. Grid
operators admitted most of the problem resulted from disruptions in power
generated by natural gas caused by frozen gas lines. Abbott eventually walked
back the renewables statement. His dissembling didn’t help and didn’t encourage
confidence in a state government under fire for a preventable human tragedy.
Any Hope of Change?
Public anger raised hopes for change in Texas. Abbot put several
energy regulatory issues on his legislative agenda. Details aren’t clear yet,
so it’s too soon to predict what might pass and what effect anything passed
would have.
Many weren’t holding their breath.
Publicattention in
disasters, white hot for a time, notoriously fades. The 2022 election, when voters might throw out some of
the culprits, seems ages away. Many other things will occupy the political
space between now and then.
That brings us to two Texas politicians who took leave of the
state while things
were bad. U.S. Senator Ted Cruz, when caught heading for a vacation in Mexico, claimed he took the trip because
his children besieged him to and he “wanted to be a good dad.” He flew back to
Houston the day after he left, admitting he’d made a mistake. Attorney General Ken Paxton and his state senator wife found meetings in Utah they couldn’t miss.
People are mad at Cruz and Paxton, but
their loyal followings remain.
By the time they face the voters again (Cruz 2024, Paxton 2022), both will likely have pivoted to the
usual list of Republican boogeyman issues that have kept them and those like
them in power all these years. We won’t bet against them. We wish we could.