Thursday, July 29, 2021

THE UNVACCINATED



"99.5% of deaths are among the unvaccinated." US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy on recent coronavirus deaths.


The anti vaccine myth first took hold in the world back in nineteen ninety eight when former British surgeon Andrew Wakefield published a poorly researched study claiming that there was a link between certain vaccinations and autism in the medical paper The Lancet.  Although the article was later retracted by that paper, the damage was done; propped up by celebrities like Jenny McCarthy, lies about one of the greatest scientific advances in the history of the world were spread all over the media.  The one good piece of news is the anti vaccine belief never hit the mainstream in the US, with it mostly staying on the fringes of society.  

Sadly, the same cannot be said about the anti vaccine movement that has arisen during the covid crisis.  Recently, the European Union exceeded America in the percentage of its people being vaccinated, and with recent polls showing a whopping forty seven percent of Republicans saying that they do not plan to get the vaccine, these depressing trends appear to be ready to continue.  The reasons people give for not getting vaccinated range from reasonable sounding (the vaccines are too new) to insane (magnetism!).  It is truly upsetting to consider that while other countries are begging for more vaccinations, many parts of America are running a surplus!

So why are so many Americans turning away from a vaccine that  has been used on  billions of people around the world, even as a more contagious strain of the virus is spreading around the nation? It appears to be a unique brand of American stubbornness, combined with anti intellectualism.  Now while there is some distrust of the vaccine in African American communities (who's basis for distrust of the government regarding health has historical precedent) it is mostly in politically conservative, mostly white communities that the anti vaccine attitudes run the strongest.  Most of this is due to the downplaying of the virus that the Donald Trump administration did almost from the beginning of the pandemic: from him calling the coronavirus a "liberal hoax" to his claims that it will disappear when the weather gets warmer, Trump shrugged off the threat for a long time before finally starting to care when it kept getting worse.  Even then, he seemed to support anti mask protests going on in places like Michigan.  And, taking their cues from the president, the right wing media fell in line with him, shrugging off the virus for far too long  even as cases soared.

To be fair, both Trump and the right wing media have equivocated on this issue: Trump got the vaccine himself, but allowed no photography of the moment and defends people who don't want to get it.  Conservative commentator Sean Hannity spoke out for vaccines, before just seconds later when he condemned universities that have vaccination requirements.  Obviously, coming after months of misleading covid statements coming from both the former president and Fox News, this is all a little too little and a little too late. 

While Joe Biden has admirably tried to encourage people to get the shot, the sad fact of the matter is that the more he talks about it, the more conservatives are digging in, just to defy him. To them risking their own lives and the lives of people around them means less than admitting that they're wrong.   (Anyone who's ever argued with a Trump supporter knows how hard it can be to change someone's mind).  And everything from offering free marijuana to lottery tickets hasn't moved the needle enough. Right now Biden is considering requiring all civilian federal employees to either be vaccinated or regularly tested, and I absolutely think that that is the right thing to do.  And I hope that private businesses and universities join in on vaccine mandates.  Sure, the right wing media will howl, and there will be protests (a similar decision made by the French government was recently protested) I still think it's the right thing to do (the decision in France  also led to a big increase in people getting vaccinated).  We need to show the unvaccinated that life will be much harder for them until they finally give in and just get the same shot that hundreds of millions of other Americans have already gotten.  Putting it simply, some people's desire to "own the libs" is not more important than a return to normalcy. 

Tuesday, July 6, 2021

TRUMP'S RECKONING?




Back in the nineteen eighties, president Ronald Reagan was often called the "teflon" president, because no matter what happened around him, it never stuck to him.  From the Iran Contra scandal to ignoring the deaths of people with AIDS, Reagan always seemed able to emerge unscathed from problems that might have sunk another president.  His amiable (if absent minded) persona always seemed to win enough of the support of the American public to keep him popular.

A few years ago, people started calling then president  Donald Trump "teflon Don", implying once again that we had a president who never seemed to have to pay for the various terrible and corrupt things going on around him.  That certainly seemed true, as Trump shrugged off sexual assault and rape charges from twenty six women, ignored the emoluments clause of the Constitution, and was impeached by the House of Representatives, all while saying and tweeting utterly offensive ("Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are the co founders of Isis") or downright stupid (the sound from windmills can give you cancer) things that should have ended his political career but didn't.

And now, after seventy five years of always getting what he wants, Trump may finally face some level of retribution:  on July first, the Manhattan district attorney’s office announced charges against the Trump Organization and its chief financial executive, Allen H. Weisselberg.  This could possibly lead to charges being leveled against Trump himself.  Like a mob boss, Trump has always demanded complete loyalty from those around him, and lives in fear of someone turning on him, which Weisselberg may do. That said, given all the various accusations made about Trump and his organization over the years, these do not seem to be particularly strong accusations;  they allege that over the past fifteen years the Trump organization  gifted Weisselberg things like a free apartment, a car, or school tuition, adding up to millions of dollars, without declaring any of these things on his taxes.  The good news is that this may be just the beginning of the investigation, with more serious charges in the offing, depending on whether Weisselberg flips on Trump in order to reduce his own sentence or not.

So, will Weisselberg flip?  That's a big question: on the one hand, his former daughter in law Jennifer Weisselberg recently told the New Yorker that, concerning Allen Weisselberg, "His whole worth is 'Does Donald like me today?' It's his whole life, his core being. He's obsessed. He has more feelings and adoration for Donald than for his wife."  On the other hand, she also remembers Trump coming to visit Alan Weisselberg's home and blurting out "This is where my C.F.O. lives? It's embarrassing!", he then showed off naked pictures of women he had claimed to have slept with and hit on Jennifer Weisselberg.  The fact that all of this was done while the family was mourning the death of a loved one makes it all the more repulsive (and par for the course for Trump).  Could such boorish behavior come back to bite Trump now that his former C. F. O. is in the legal crosshairs?  Let's hope it does.

One crazy thing is Trump and his son Donald Jr. have both publicly admitted to the crimes by shrugging them off, implying that somehow they were just being nice to Weisselberg, not seeming to realize that millions of dollars in gifts are still taxable no matter how well meaning their intention.  One thing is sadly true, these charges will not change the unshakeable faith of the core Republican voters who have stood by Trump ever since he first announced his candidacy and who want him to run again in twenty twenty four.  Heck, he may be the first American politician to run for the presidency while in jail.  All bets are off with this guy.