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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsSen. Kamala Harris on the Inherent Inequalities of the COVID-19 Pandemic
Trump also is a result of this history of racism and backlash against black and other minority advancement .
<We must speak the truth of the moment: America is suffering from a public health and economic crisis. And as with any crisislike the Great Recessioncommunities that were already hurt by systemic inequality are being hit the hardest during the coronavirus pandemic. Black people, in particular, are being infected by and dying from COVID-19 at alarming rates. The available data suggests majority Black counties have an infection rate three times and a death rate six times that of majority white counties. These disparities are evident across the country, from New York to Chicago to Los Angeles. And this pandemic further reinforces historic inequities, which have roots in slavery and Jim Crow laws, that remain persistent and profound to this very day.
Some may wonder why Black communities are disproportionately suffering from COVID-19. Unfortunately, this news didnt come as a surprise to me or anyone familiar with our countrys shameful legacy of racial inequality. This coronavirus preys on people with underlying health conditions, many of which Black people suffer from at disproportionate rates. In fact, 2.6 million Black people have asthma (partly due to high levels of air pollution in our neighborhoods) and more than 40% of Black people have high blood pressure. Black people are also more likely to have lupus and sickle cell anemia, a blood disorder that makes a person particularly vulnerable to infections. Pre-existing conditions combined with having high-exposure jobs and inadequate health care is leading to the deadly consequences we are seeing across the country.
This is a public health crisis that caused an economic one. In recent weeks, more than 16 million people filed for unemployment after the coronavirus outbreak shuttered businesses across the country. Thats already nearly double the job losses that occurred during the Great Recession following the 2008 financial crash. This is especially painful for families that lack savings to fall back on during hard times. For the Black community, a lack of wealth results from a long history of discrimination that has led to the median Black household making 59 cents to the dollar of the median white household, Black people having more student debt than their white counterparts, less homeownership, and a lack of capital for Black businesses. And while employers and schools shift to remote working and learning, many jobsessential grocery store workers, bus drivers, etc.cannot be done from the safety of home. And many childrenspecifically Black childrendont have access to the internet at home, which will likely cause them to fall behind other students in their age group. All of which continues the cycle of inequality.
The United States has the chance, during this National Minority Health Month, to right historical wrongs. We have the opportunity to make strides toward our founding ideals of equality, fairness, and opportunity for all. We must keep fighting to leave a better world for our children and grandchildren. >
https://www.elle.com/culture/career-politics/a32169314/kamala-harris-coronavirus-black-communities-pandemic-health-care/