While the media is focused on the predetermined hearings for Amy Coney Barrett, Trump’s nominee for the Supreme Court seat formerly held by the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the big story of the day is the resurgence of coronavirus.
The nation is back up to more than 50,000 new cases a day, the highest rate since early August, and numbers are continuing to rise. The states currently suffering worst are those in the northern Midwest-- Wisconsin, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota—but more than 30 states are reporting rising numbers. Wisconsin is so overwhelmed with cases it’s opening a field hospital this week, and it seems that Arkansas, Montana, North Dakota, and Oklahoma are right behind.
More children are being diagnosed with Covid-19, as well, making up more than 77,000 new infections.
The White House has abandoned the idea of controlling the virus and instead is openly embracing the idea of “herd immunity.” Officials are arguing that the nation should protect our most vulnerable neighbors—the elderly and the infirm—and the rest of us should go about our lives normally, without waiting for a vaccine.
While the White House has been saying this for months, it now has a group of scientists advancing the plan in a document called The Great Barrington Declaration. This idea is being pushed by the libertarian American Institute for Economic Research, and scientists whose work has been dismissed by most epidemiologists. It offers no data or scientific argument; it is a political opinion.
The Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, called the plan “unethical” because it “means allowing unnecessary infections, suffering and death.” He explains that the concept of herd immunity is one used for vaccines, achieved “by protecting people from a virus, not by exposing them to it.” “Never in the history of public health has herd immunity been used as a strategy for responding to an outbreak, let alone a pandemic,” he said. “It is scientifically and ethically problematic.”
The idea of simply letting the infection spread is not popular among Americans, especially among the seniors Trump needs to win Florida. In 2016, seniors preferred Trump to Hillary Clinton by 49% to 44%. Now they are turning to Biden rather than Trump by 54% to 43%. Weirdly, Trump took to Twitter today to post a tweet apparently making fun of Biden by picturing him as a resident of a senior home—not calculated to win over more older Americans.
This approach reinforces the idea the president is trying to push after his own bout with coronavirus: that the illness is not a big deal and that those who say it is are simply trying to hurt his chances of reelection. At the Barrett hearings, Republican Mike Lee of Utah, recently diagnosed with coronavirus, refused to wear a mask. White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows also refused to wear one when talking with reporters, apparently concerned about being filmed in a mask when the official White House position was to downplay the virus.
Meanwhile, another official who attended the celebration for Barrett at the Rose Garden on September 26 has tested positive for the virus.
America leads the world in infections and deaths. Globally, at least 38 million cases of Covid-19 have been recorded as of 6:30 this evening. More than a million people have died. America has had at least 7,850,000 cases and more than 215,000 deaths.
As horrific as those numbers are, an article published yesterday in the Journal of the American Medical Association says they are far too low. Dr. Steven Woolf, the author of the study, says that “for every two Americans that we know of who are dying of Covid-10, another American is dying.” Woolf looked at what are called “excess deaths” from March through July, that is, the increase over the average number of deaths expected in those months. He found 225,530 excess deaths. Sixty-seven percent of those deaths are linked directly to Covid-19, but the remaining 33% are unexplained, suggesting this unusual spike is related to the pandemic.
Erika Edwards of NBC News highlighted this study today, along with another in the same issue of the JAMA that compares U.S. death rates to those of other wealthy countries. The U.S. ranked poorly. According to the article, our Covid-19 mortality rate is 60.3 per 100,000 people. Canada’s rate is 24.6 per 100,000, and Australia’s was 3.3 deaths per 100,000. If we had had the same rate as Canada, we would have lost 117,000 fewer people, and 188,000 Americans would have been saved if we had the same death rate as Australia.
The good news is that Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said today that vaccine development is “on a really good track.” Two vaccines have been put on hold as a volunteer in each trial has gotten sick, but Fauci says this is not at all unusual. He says he hopes that by November or December we should know if we have a safe and effective vaccine. If so, it will be distributed first to those who need it most, but will gradually become available to the rest of us.
Once again, Dr. Fauci reminded us to wear masks, maintain physical distance from others, avoid crowds, stay outside when possible, and wash hands. “Those simple things, as simple as they sound, can certainly turn around the spikes that we see and can prevent new spikes from occurring,” Fauci told Shepard Smith on CNBC Monday night. “We know that because our experience has proven to us that that is the case. We just need to hunker down and do that.”
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Notes:
https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/coronavirus-pandemic-10-13-20-intl/index.html
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2020/10/13/world/coronavirus-covid
https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/13/health/us-coronavirus-tuesday/index.html
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/world/who-herd-immunity-coronavirus-pandemic-unethical-a4569231.html
https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/nation/proposal-to-hasten-herd-immunity-grabs-white-house-attention-appalls-top-scientists/
For me the story of the day, year, decade, century was Senator's Senator Whitehouse's half hour speech -- here's a link to it https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cjcXVKg43qY It feels like a speech that is going to be among the top speeches about democracy -- and shall I say it's demise -- ever given. The dark money that has taken over politics and our government is truly frightening but it all fits together and explains what has happened/is happening to democracy. It goes so far beyond Citizens United and pulls so many of the puppet strings and sticks together. Four things: 1. Dark Money 2. Get rid of those annoying juries 3. Support less regulations and 4. Voter suppression. It is always about following the money and Senator Whitehouse just did. He just went on my hero list. Wow! Every one needs to watch this speech! Vote as if it is the last time you'll be allowed to vote!
I think the real story today are the impossibly long lines of people waiting to vote. That's "people power", with Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett dodging and weaving has she prevaricators her way to an unearned seat on the Supreme Court as a sideshow. She may take her place on the High Bench, but there is no guarantee that she'll be allowed to stay there. Barrett has gotten where she is because she has friends in high places. That may change.
As for the spike of coronavirus infections, it is sad to watch what is happening; but what gets my attention is where it is happening. Donald Trump has tricked himself out as the ringmaster of a viral superspreader traveling circus. In behaving this way, Trump has become Joe Biden's best advertisement for getting rid of Trump. We are not seeing Trump performing before increasingly large crowds of his enthusiastic followers; it seems to be a couple of thousand here, or there, about the same as you might find at a second or third tier college football game, or that of a highly ranked high school football team in some rural area where there is not much else going on elsewhere on a warm Friday evening. During the fall football season, there is a lot of that sort of thing that ordinarily goes on here in Northern California, but not this year. It is truly sad that people expose themselves, and their families, and anyone else they might run into to this contagion. What strikes me is the utter nihilism of people's attitude, and how willingly they will parrot a bogus philosophy of 'freedom' to act irresponsibly for no reason other than spite. Social media and a false celebrity have amplified their sense of grievance and entitlement, the reward for which is increasingly illness and death. What I find really sad is the lack of pushback from people within that environment who ought to know better, but who can bring themselves to ring the irresponsible ones to account.
The phenomenon that really impresses me most are the huge numbers of people who were lining up, masked up, provisioned, and who are prepared to stand in line for up to 12 hours just in order to vote. Again, this is "people power"at its best. My vote is already cast, 23 days ahead of the deadline; but this is California, and we try to be proactive about things. That initial show of voter strength is taking on force and speed like an incoming hurricane. The tide is running with the Biden campaign, and people are going to want to be a part of it. Action begets action. The seriousness of the moment amplifies the gravitational force against Trump that has been building over the past four years. This will be a force that no amount of cheating or chicanery will likely defeat. I think Team Biden is going to win this one, big time. Just you watch!