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applegrove

(118,648 posts)
Tue Mar 10, 2020, 08:38 PM Mar 2020

Can This America Handle a Public Health Crisis?Our trust in public institutions--and .. each other -

Can This America Handle a Public Health Crisis?Our trust in public institutions—and our trust in each other—is low.

By DAHLIA LITHWICK at Slate

MARCH 10, 20207:23 PM

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/03/coronavirus-american-politics-public-trust.html

"SNIP......

What if we’re already sick? Not with the new coronavirus, though that is proving far more serious and widespread today as compared just with yesterday. But what if the preconditions that have allowed the viral spread of this near pandemic are uniquely American, and frighteningly contagious, even as they are largely psychological and social? I’m referring not simply to a health care system and a health insurance and labor structurethat are fundamentally inadequate to respond to a massive public health crisis, but to a larger set of ideas and beliefs that make even admitting that the virus is real, or dangerous, or larger than politics, worse than death. These are freakishly dangerous ideas and beliefs that have made large segments of the country unwilling to trust in science, media, and truth most of the time, yes, but certainly whenever it seems the information being delivered isn’t what they want to hear.

This goes beyond the disgraceful, sneering contempt of Rep. Matt Gaetz, who is now self-quarantining after coming into contact with the virus, or the president’s frankly horrific suggestion that he didn’t want the number of infected passengers on a cruise ship to be tallied on his watch because it would make him look bad. (It’s only “politicizing” the crisis when Democrats, scientists, epidemiologists, Italians, and the World Health Organization say anything about it, remember.) It also goes beyond the catastrophic set of decisions made by this administration to do away with the National Security Council’s global pandemic director, make cuts to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and lie outright to the country about the number and availability of test kits in a concerted effort to downplay the risk of the virus. That’s all awful, but still, the real spadework done by this administration to ensure that this pandemic wreaks maximal havoc in this country has been achieved by a preexisting illness: the erosion of public trust in institutions and, more dangerously, in one another, in ways that make rational safety precautions partisan. This epidemic will rise or fall on our collective capacity to behave selflessly in the short run, to exhibit empathy to vulnerable communities that have been senselessly vilified in recent years, including the poor, immigrants, and the elderly. And yet the notion that we could come together to behave selflessly—even to save our own selves—now feels remote.

Polls show that by a two-to-one margin, Democrats are more likely than Republicans to believe that the coronavirus represents an imminent threat, and that Democrats are more likely to take the public health precautions that would limit its spread. That’s not because Democrats are better people than Republicans. It’s because the conservative media has squandered precious time and public trust downplaying the risks of the virus and constructing a narrative in which any steps taken to mitigate the harms mean giving in to a liberal hoax. If awareness of and attention to the pandemic is politically bad for Donald Trump, goes the logic, then denial and minimizing the risk is good. Whatever the cost. Weeks later, it’s clear that the coronavirus will have tangible costs for public health and the economy, but it is not evident that the truth has broken through, with the recent notable exception of Tucker Carlson. It’s going to be fashionable to deride precautions as hysteria and overreaction, long after it’s time for the virus to be taken seriously. For that we can blame media polarization that is predicated on the claim that the other side lies constantly, even over matters of life and death. Debates about whether to panic or mock those who panic are wholly beside the point; the point is that we know how to mitigate both spread and lethality, and can do so or fail to do so, but that needs to start immediately.

Virtually every thoughtful epidemiologist I have read on this says that the absolute worst thing to be done right now is hoarding surgical masks and putting yourself first. Conversely, the decision to put altruism before panic would redound not just to our own benefit, but to the actual benefit of the entire herd. The choice to stay home, to care for the elderly and the sick (and help them stay home), to figure out systems to look after children whose parents cannot take time off—all of that would be good for everyone. Yet it comes after years, if not decades, of being told constantly that vaccines cause autism, poverty should be punished and criminalized, and every government system is “rigged” to harm you and help others. Tell people that everyone’s a criminal and grifter long enough and it’s awfully hard to get them to look out for each other.

......SNIP"

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