Coronavirus has provoked a panic. People are stockpiling
masks and toilet paper, public gatherings are being canceled, dogs and cats are
living together. But the evidence shows that COVID-19 has a death rate that is
still only about two percent. What if the death rate was much higher? For
example, what if what we were dealing with was similar to the Super Flu from The
Stand or the Motaba virus from Outbreak? Would we be comfortable with
the government’s reaction?
Granted, if the stakes were higher, the federal government
and both parties would probably be reacting differently. Still, what I have
seen so far has not instilled me with confidence that our government is capable
of handling a more serious emergency.
First off, let’s consider the jurisdiction argument. The
Constitution specifically grants Congress the power to take action and spend to
promote the general welfare of the United States. While the general welfare
clause has been much abused over the years, taking action to prevent a pandemic
from potentially killing thousands of citizens would seem to be a legitimate
public welfare goal. Further, the Public
Health Service Act specifically permits a national emergency to be declared
if a “disease or disorder presents a public health emergency” or in the case of
“significant outbreaks of infectious diseases.”
Having established that it is a proper government role to
prepare the country for a pandemic, let’s look at the federal government’s
response. The good news is that the Trump Administration took the pro-active
step of limiting
immigration from China back in January when the extent of the epidemic
there became clear. The bad news is that the Administration’s steps since then
have been much more muddled and less effective.
At this point, it is impossible to get an accurate count of
COVID-19 cases in the US because of a shortage of test kits. Early test kits
were inaccurate
because of a faulty component. That problem has been resolved but the kits
are still in short supply due to high worldwide demand and production that
simply can’t keep up.
There have been other missteps as well. For example, After
American evacuees from Wuhan were brought into the US in February, a
whistleblower reported that they were met
by health workers without protective gear and who were not tested for the virus.
Several patients who were supposed to be under quarantine left
their homes to travel, possibly infecting hundreds of others in the
process. As recently as yesterday, a former photographer for the Chicago
Tribune tweeted that she flew into O’Hare from Spain and was not questioned
about exposure to the virus or examined for symptoms.
https://twitter.com/NancyLStone/status/1238282634041733122?s=20
https://twitter.com/NancyLStone/status/1238282634041733122?s=20
Through it all, President Trump’s response has been
inconsistent. Like elected officials in disaster movies, too often the
president has seemed more focused on the election rather than preventing the
spread of the disease and treating those who are at risk. There are reports that
President Trump overruled a CDC plan to recommend that seniors, the most
at-risk group for the Coronavirus, limit their air travel to help contain the
disease. At the same time, the president said that he would prefer
not to let cruise ship passengers who had been exposed to the disease enter the
US where they could be treated and quarantined. As other organizations
cancel public gatherings, the Trump
campaign continues to hold rallies and the president continues to shake
hands with supporters, even after an infected CPAC attendee exposed members of
Congress to the virus. The president has, however, cited
the Coronavirus as a reason to build the wall, a claim the director
of the CDC rejects. Even after President Trump was exposed to the
Coronavirus by a Brazilian official, the White
House said that the president is not being tested for the disease and
presumably will not subject himself to quarantine either. The president is
setting a poor example for the country.
In fact, much of the information
put out by the president has been bad. The president has been among those
who pooh-poohed the severity of the disease, at one point saying that it would
“miraculously”
disappear by April, a statement disputed by the CDC. He has claimed that COVID-19
has been contained within the United States, that testing
is available to anyone who wants it, and even that people
infected by the virus should go to work. None of these claims are true.
Much of the Trump Administration’s response to the pandemic
has been economic rather than health-related. Seeking to contain the damage
that has been done to the stock market over the past week, the president has
proposed a payroll
tax cut and bailouts
for affected industries. A travel ban directed at Europe seems to have been
added as an afterthought and coincidentally exempts
three nations that are home to Trump golf resorts.
At this point, the travel ban seems like a case of closing
the barn door after the calf is out. COVID-19 is already present in the United
States and apparently spreading quickly. As of this writing, there are 1,663
confirmed cases and likely many more that have not been identified. With
the virus spreading inside our borders, restrictions would have to include
domestic travel to be effective.
While the president was willing to declare a national
emergency over migrant caravans approaching the southern border, he has so far
been unwilling to do so with regard to the pandemic. Emergency measures to
contain the virus within the US would undercut Mr. Trump’s claim that the virus
is less severe than the “Fake
News” and Democrats claim. Election year politics and the president’s
previous claims that there is nothing-to-see-here-so-just-move-along make it
difficult to acknowledge now that the virus is spreading throughout the country
and is not contained at all.
As a conservative, I tend to view the government as
inefficient regardless of which party is holding its reins at the time. Given
the federal government’s response so far, it is a good thing that the estimated
mortality rate of the Coronavirus is “only” about two percent. If we reacted as
sloppily to an Ebola outbreak or a biological attack, there is no telling how
many Americans would already be dead.
A two-percent mortality rate doesn’t mean that Coronavirus
isn’t dangerous, however. The two percent rate is about 20 times the mortality
rate of the flu. Germany estimates that about 70
percent of its citizens will become infected with the virus. If only half
of the estimated 329 million Americans got sick, the 164.5 million cases would
overwhelm the nation’s hospitals. A two percent mortality rate for the sick
would mean that more than three million Americans would die from the virus. That’s
serious and explains why containment is so important.
Thankfully, state and local governments, as well as private
organizations, are picking up the slack. Georgia’s
Republican governor asked schools to consider closing and New
York deployed the National Guard to one hard-hit town to enforce a
containment area and help deliver food to residents. Many organizations are
postponing or canceling public gatherings to help prevent the spread of the
disease. These closings are not totally altruistic. Few tickets to most events
would be sold to a public that is increasingly avoiding crowds of strangers. Some
Americans are panicking but others are taking simple precautions such as
washing their hands and avoiding close proximity to those who are sneezing and
coughing.
The Coronavirus is not Donald Trump’s fault, but it also is
not a hoax or fake news. Unfortunately, the president seems to not be up to the
task of leading the country through the crisis. Mr. Trump’s failure to rise to
the occasion may haunt his re-election prospects much longer than this week’s
stock market collapse.
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