
Science issues unfortunately sometimes become political issues, the most prominent example of which, as polls show, is โglobal climate change.โ Itโs not a flat โI believe; I donโt believe,โ as the mainstream media would have you think, but distinctions are clear. Likewise, aspects of Covid-19 have also become politicized, including vaccines but most especially lockdowns and the various mechanisms of anti-social distancing.
The left, including the U.S. mainstream media, has always pushed a hysterical approach to both Covid spread and severity. But chinks in the armor are now appearing as it becomes clear that many want a permanent Covidocracy โ lockdown forever and ever, amen.
Writing in the May 4, 2021 Atlantic, โThe Liberals Who Canโt Quit Lockdown,โ Emma Green admits what many of us suspected, including anti-Trumpers, that โFor many progressives, extreme vigilance was in part about opposing Donald Trump.โ Indeed, a survey that Bill Maher would later cite of American media coverage of the pandemic showed a significant fall-off of the โWeโre all gonna dieโ articles right after the election.
She also gently chides some of her fellow liberals stating, โEven as scientific knowledge of Covid-19 has increased, some progressives have continued to embrace policies and behaviors that arenโt supported by evidence, such as banning access to playgrounds, closing beaches, and refusing to reopen schools for in-person learning.โ
Green says this may actually be encouraging a sort of backlash on the right. โThose who are vaccinated on the left seem to think overcaution now is the way to go, which is making people on the right question the effectiveness of the vaccines.โ Maybe you and I donโt think that way, but there is a logic to it.
She also takes a swipe at the National Institutes of Allergies and Infectious Diseases director, who regardless of his personal politics, has become quite the liberal Covid guru. โAnthony Fauci recently said he wouldnโt travel or eat at restaurants even though heโs fully vaccinated, despite CDC guidance that these activities can be safe for vaccinated people who take precautions.โ Heโs giving ammo to those reaching into their pouches.
Citing a poll this spring from the University of North Carolinaโs Marc Hetherington, Green notes that โ43 percent of very liberal respondents believed that getting the coronavirus would have a โvery badโ effect on their life,โ compared to a third of those identifying as liberals and moderates.โ This is not a political question and therefore it appears that those on the far left are simply more afraid ofโฆ something. That is, perhaps Covid-19 specifically, viruses generally, germs generally โ or maybe of life. Maybe that could help explain their apparent eagerness to forfeit freedoms for safety or the perception of safety.
Indeed, โFor this subset, diligence against Covid-19 remains an expression of political identityโeven when that means overestimating the diseaseโs risks or setting limits far more strict than what public-health guidelines permit,โ she says. She goes on to show polling data indicating that liberals apparently arenโt just acting more scared, they truly are. Fear is in the liberal makeup, as it were.
And she does acknowledge that, quoting a liberal analyst, โSome progressives believe that the pandemic has created an opening for ambitious policy proposals. โAmong progressive political leaders around here, thereโs a lot of talk around: Weโre not going back to normal, because normal wasnโt good enough.โ
Too bad she didnโt use this quote thatโs been making the rounds, courtesy of โaward-winning poet, activist, author & leaderโ Sonya Renee Taylor: โWe will not go back to normal. Normal never was. Our pre-corona existence was not normal other than we normalized greed, inequity, exhaustion, depletion, extraction, disconnection, confusion, rage, hoarding, hate and lack.โ So yes, support for another โright-wing conspiracy theoryโ that at least some on the left see in the pandemic as the equivalent of the resignation of the Czar during the dark days of World War I and therefore it serves their purpose to exaggerate the threat.
But fortunately Sonya Renee Taylor is no Lenin, nor has a Trotsky at her right hand. Meanwhile, โthe empireโ might be a bit shaken but itโs not collapsing, so itโs hard to say that such sentiments are either widespread or influential. Only that, yes, they certainly exist and yes, as I have noted elsewhere, public health groups and authorities often have a Marxist bent. Heck, the Director-General of the WHO is a Marxist, and his predecessor was almost certainly a member of the CCP.
Meanwhile Bill Maher, who often plays the role of the anti-left liberal, struck somewhat harder than The Atlanticโs Green. Last August he concluded his HBO show, Real Time with Bill Maher, with a swipe at those ignoring the Covid-19 and obesity connection, out of a sense of political correctness. He specifically criticized Fauci, National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins, then surgeon general Jerome Adams, Deborah Birx, and CDC Director Robert Redfield.
But it wasnโt until his April segment, โGive it to Me Straight, Doc,โ that he unlimbered his formidable big guns. He said the pandemic was being presented as โWorld War Z,โ and railed against the โscared straight approach,โ which he also characterized as โYou canโt handle the truth!โ a la Jack Nicholsonโs famous line in A Few Good Men. โIf you lie to people even for a very good cause, you lose their trust,โ Maher observed.
But he said that was hardly the only motive, citing the American mediaโs โIf it bleeds it leadsโ mentality. โThe more they can get you inside to watch their panic porn, the higher their ratings,โ he said.
He noted (as I observed above) that a recent analysis by the National Bureau of Economic Research showed that while other countries had a mix of Covid news (specifically as high as 60 percent early last year to less than 40% this year), the U.S. national media reported more than 90 percent bad news for most of the pandemic, falling somewhat to 80% after.
โWhen all of our sources have an agenda to spin us, yeah, you wind up with a badly misinformed population,โ he said, and while he mocked some extreme conservative views he lashed out hardest on liberals as supposedly the โhigh information, by the science people.โ He noted that a December Franklin-Templeton Gallup survey showed Democrats fared much worse with the question โWhat are the chances that a person infected with Covid must be hospitalized?โ declaring โAlmost 70% of Democrats are wildly off on this key question.โ He added, โShouldnโt the liberal media have to answer for โWhy did your audience wind up believing such a load of crap about Covid?โโ (Republicans also overguessed the risk, but not by nearly as much.)
โI donโt want politics mixed in with my medical decisions,โ he said.
The mediaโs two favorite Covid-19 demons are the Texas and Florida governors, but Maher pointed out โTexas lifted their Covid restrictions recently and their infection rates went down, in part because of people getting outside โฆ letting the sun and wind do their thing.โ (Emphasis his.) I have written on the apparent protective effect of Vitamin D against Covid. He also lauded Floridaโs governor as obviously highly knowledgeable about Covid-19 and that GOP governors generally โprotected the elderly way better than the governor of New York,โ alluding to Andrew Cuomo ordering that Covid patients be put into long-term health care facilities.
He then returned to the obesity-Covid connection that I had just addressed in another publication as โThe Third Rail of Covid,โ using the same expression. It not only shows that overweight and obese people are more likely to be hospitalized or die with Covid, but โ this just in! โ research shows theyโre also more likely to contract the virus โ meaning theyโre not just suffering, theyโre spreading the suffering. Endangering others takes this to a whole new level.
โI think a lot of people died because talking about obesity has become a third rail in America,โ he said. โImagine how many lives would have been saved if there had been a national campaign,โ encouraging weight loss as a defense against Covid he said. โBut weโll never know because the last thing we want to do is say something insensitive.โ
He concludes by repeating his message about the Covid-obesity connection being essentially ignored: โInstead, we were told to lock down. Unfortunately, the killer was already in the house. Her name was Little Debbie.โ
Still, as Maher noted, thereโs been a good amount of Covid kookiness on the right, and indeed some on the right have embraced pandemic hysteria. An influential right-wing writer friend promotes the view of โGlobal Cosmopolitans,โ a self-described group of โelites,โ urging a rapid campaign to vaccinate the entire world against Covid-19. Never mind that it took 25 years to eradicate smallpox, a rather more serious disease, and The Polio Eradication Program is now in its 33rd year. Decades behind schedule, itโs now been set back even further by, yes, the Covid focus.
No political persuasion has a monopoly on pushing an agenda or on the mass psychogenic illness (mass hysteria) weโve been seeing over the last 14 months and unfortunately, that will continue to plague us.
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