I love ya’ but I don’t see the president finding a balance at all. He’s been very effective at minimizing the reality of this dread disease in order to protect business. It seems very skewed in one direction.
The problem with that is it has led to an inconsistent governmental approach and a patchwork of state actions that have in turn led to effective curve flattening in some areas and not in others. It has also led to a distrust of what the president is saying and a distrust in reopening. Which will lead to continued economic disaster as the majority of people continue to limit travel and non-essential outings.
I mean look at 9/11. The fear that caused created a domino-effect economic slide. And that was just air travel for the most part. So what is the effect of an unseen enemy on the world’s economy even if we never shut down at all? Even if 30% of the population refrain from booking trips, eating out, going to sporting events, music events, etc., we are facing devastation.
But we do have a major problem in this country when people have to choose between health (their own and risking other’s) and paying the bills needed to survive. Other nations have been more successful in mitigating the damage in a way that enables their citizens to stay home and/or follow strict social distancing and hygiene rules, than we have. And as I’ve said before, economic instability leads to an urge to minimize and scoff at the very rules that would enable us to reopen more quickly and safely, like wearing masks, keeping apart from others, washing hands, etc.
It’s crucial to minimize the threat in order to convince others that reopening is safe. And that means acting as if even basic safety guidelines are histrionic. That’s hurt us tremendously and will likely lead to a roller coaster of cases spiking and receding and shutdowns and reopenings.
But on another note, a vaccine isn’t going to be the be-all, end-all. We have a significant population who are against vaccinations and even more who likely won’t trust a vaccine created for this, thinking that it’s too rushed to be safe, and in general not trusting our health care system. But vaccine efficacy relies on the majority being vaccinated. And this disease could be like the seasonal flu with a new vaccine needed every year.
So we have to figure out a way to address this. How do we keep people safe but at the same time prevent more destruction of the economy?
I think we need cohesive, honest leadership at all levels that isn’t partisan and isn’t divided into science and medicine on one side and the economy and freedom on the other. A comprehensive and logical education campaign that is fact-based rather than fear-based and takes ideology out of it would be something people can trust.
I do think that the media hype has made people wary of safety measures we need to take. When people are being told they need to douse their groceries in bleach, wear hazmat suits to go outside, never leave the house, not socialize in any way except remotely, that we can catch it just from breathing the same air etc., eventually people stop listening.
If instead we had serious, public campaigns about hand washing, strict laws that mandate hand washing of employees in businesses, face mask wearing mandatory in all businesses where it’s truly feasible and necessary (like grocery stores, Target, etc.) employees wearing face masks even when patrons can’t (like at restaurants), fining people for spitting or blowing snot in public (which I continue to see on public trails and paths, here in CA), and campaigns explaining why that’s so dangerous, even if others aren’t around, etc., plus effective social distancing guidelines, like one way trials or sidewalks, accurately spaced marks for checkouts or restaurants, shutting down businesses that fail to follow the rules (and allow patrons to pack in at the moment), we might be able to get a handle on this thing.
As it stands, people are confused and leery and are making this disease and how to minimize contagion, ideological.
Paid to Stay Home: Europe’s Safety Net Could Ease Toll of Coronavirus