Why Wishful Thinking on Covid Remains As Dangerous as Ever | The Nation

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Sean Strub

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Feb 3, 2022, 4:46:56 PM2/3/22
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If you are amongst the many feeling Covid-fatigue, questioning whether we need to just give up and accept this as a permanent part of our lives, put aside masking, distancing and other risk-mitigation measures, then I urge you to read this article.  I've questioned the efficacy of these efforts, and my own, in recent weeks.  I am vaxxed and boosted, pretty diligent about avoiding situations where there is a heightened risk of transmission, so complacency is not a surprise.

But at the same time, I'm hearing about more and more people who are dying of Covid, more about the complications from "Long Covid" and see people abandoning any pretense of caring.

Gregg's article I find to be persuasive.

Sean


Why Wishful Thinking on Covid Remains As Dangerous as Ever

Pundits urging us to treat Covid “like the flu” or pushing “the urgency of normal” are just variations of the siren song of surrender to needless death and preventable disease.

By Gregg GonsalvesTwitter

Today 5:30 am

Close up of a Male Health care worker wearing protective equipment, mask, gown and gloves, sitting in a chair beside a closed hospital room looking exhausted.

(Vicki Smith / Getty Images)

We’ve entered a new phase in the Covid-19 pandemic, which we can call bipartisan, unilateral surrender. From liberal and conservative pundits and politicians on both sides of the aisle to the celebrity docs who show up on cable news or in supermarket magazines, we’re being told SARS-CoV-2 is endemic now—which of course has nothing to do with the technical term, but has become popular shorthand for “it’s over.” We’re vaxxed-and-done now and we should be allowed, with no more mask requirements or other efforts to mitigate spread, to resume our pre-pandemic lives with the “urgency of normal.”

I’ve spent two years railing about the irresponsibility and cruelty of many Republicans and their cavalier response to the pandemic, endangering millions with policies destined to simply make people sick: suggesting that vaccination and freedom are incompatible concepts, that grandparents were willing to die for the economy—the whole horrible litany of lies and misinformation churned out by the party and its proxies.

But now it’s different. People who were scrupulous about following public health advice in 2020 are now too tired, frustrated, and fed-up to care. Those still masking, doing some social distancing, trying to do their part to stem the tide of the pandemic are being treated as if they are holdouts in a war that is long over. Or risk-averse scaredy-cats, ridiculed as out-of-touch liberal elites by commentators on the right like Ross Douhtat; as deluded, too-far-to-the-left zealots by centrist pundits like David Leonhardt. Both of whom write for that touchstone of very serious people everywhere, The New York Times, so it must be true.

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Except the pandemic is not over by a long shot. We’ve been seeing 1,000 deaths a day in the United States for months now; over the past few weeks, as Omicron deaths catch up to the vast number of infections diagnosed weeks earlier, we’ve had far more than that. The last day of January saw over 2,500 deaths in this country. Hospitals are still reeling in many places, and both health care and public health workers on the front line are just burned out and losing their shit. And that word—endemic—which in epidemiological terms connotes a pathogen that has stabilized at a long-term equilibrium in a population—hasn’t really arrived yet, with the pandemic still raging across the globe, even as Omicron numbers start to decline in some places. Then there’s the belief—now popular in the press—that Omicron is the “last” variant of any real concern. We’ll all have been exposed to the virus or vaccinated against it soon enough, and any subsequent strains that may wash over us will be mild, no worse than the flu or the common cold.

I’m not suggesting that we need to be on a state of high alert forever. But we need to shape Covid-19 policies according to the data, not by wishful thinking among people who should know better. To sound the all-clear now or imply that we can in the next few weeks is presumptuous at best. If we want to learn from history, we can simply look at the 20th century’s most fearsome pandemics for guidance. John Barry, the historian of the great influenza of 1918, reminds us that the deadly fourth wave of that catastrophe only occurred in 1920, when millions had already been exposed to the virus, when the lethality of the third wave was subsiding, most people had let down their guard, and no public official was interested in pushing mitigation efforts in the face of the indifference and weariness of a nation. Barry also reminds us that “natural immunity” and vaccination after the influenza pandemics in the late 1950s didn’t stop the virus from cutting a large swath of death in 1960 when it returned with a vengeance. A similar scenario played out in Europe in 1968 and 2009 flu pandemics, when, after a first round of infections and vaccinations, influenza’s second wave crested and washed over the weary continent.

In more recent memory, I can remember when in 1996, with the advent of new AIDS drugs that revolutionized the care of HIV infection (and saved my life), some pundits were calling it the end of the AIDS epidemic. Andrew Sullivan wrote a piece in The New York Times Magazine called “When Plagues End” in November of that year. Of course, the AIDS epidemic wasn’t over for everyone. The privileged gay men who had health insurance and easy access to health care certainly took the drugs and went home, abandoning the fight against the epidemic as it continued to ravage Black and brown US communities, particularly young gay men of color, as it moved from the middle-class urban enclaves of the North and West to become a more rural and more Southern epidemic.

What we’re seeing now is a combination of what we saw with influenza and with HIV. First, it’s capitulation based on misguided or at least premature hope, frustration, and anger that this has gone on for so long, disrupting our lives. It doesn’t help that America’s political leaders have never really stepped up to address the pandemic with the seriousness of other nations, nor provided the necessary social and economic support to help people survive these past few years. Instead, they have largely left us alone against a virus. While pundits try to spin this as a debate about risk management at an individual level—claiming that some of us are being too cautious as we enter the golden age of endemicity—it’s far more like what happened with HIV: Once people feel like they’re safe enough, the safety of others doesn’t really matter that much.

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In his letter from jail in Birmingham, Ala., Martin Luther King Jr. bemoaned “the white moderate” and how he found the “shallow understanding from people of goodwill…more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will.” The great, white middle—stretching right and left across the political spectrum and the op-ed pages of the Times—is ready to move on. The thing is: Those left behind don’t have the choices or the resources that those with privilege do, whether they are poor, living with disabilities or chronic medical conditions—or just too old to matter. As my friend and colleague Steven Thrasher has noted, they will become the latest viral underclass in America, where inequality and disease collide.

Perhaps we’ll all get lucky. Maybe the disease will die out over the next few months, or over the next year or so, and while new variants will emerge, they’ll be of little clinical consequence. It all sounds wonderful, doesn’t it?

I’ve strangely hoped that we would find a way to rally to this greatest of challenges facing us—a once-in-a-century pandemic. But that was never going to happen, was it? The American way isn’t about building a system that works for all of us, protects everyone. Nor are Americans really interested in being our brothers’ and sisters’ keepers. What we are, who we are, set us up for the outsize calamity that has happened over the past two years. We’ve never believed everyone needed access to health care, a robust safety net, and a comprehensive public health system. In America, if you don’t make it, or fall, or stumble, it’s your own fault, because here we are all self-made men and women. Those who survive are meant to do so. The rest of us are simply collateral damage, in a social Darwinism that is American as apple pie.


Wendy Kaplan

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Feb 3, 2022, 5:33:16 PM2/3/22
to Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
Really sums it up in a nutshell. Great honest piece. Thank you Sean!

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On Feb 3, 2022, at 4:46 PM, Sean Strub <sean....@gmail.com> wrote:


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Alyse Kobin

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Feb 3, 2022, 6:48:40 PM2/3/22
to Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve

Quite unfortunate that no matter what honest and completely forthright information is shared, sadly, there will always be disbelievers.  

My husband and I continue to be compliant and diligent in our actions in an effort to keep ourselves and all around us safe.

While yes it is frustrating with our lives turned around - we do have lives and live in a wonderful community of caring and giving people.

We need to continue to support each other, and work collaboratively as we are, to stay educated, healthy and of great ‘mental health’ as well.

Thank you for continuing to provide important information such as this.

Alyse Kobin






Nancy Schoenleber

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Feb 3, 2022, 6:48:40 PM2/3/22
to Wendy Kaplan, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
Disheartening in many ways, but so true. We need to be willing to protect ourselves and others for at least awhile longer and in every way possible. Thanks for sharing this, Sean.

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On Feb 3, 2022, at 5:33 PM, 'Wendy Kaplan' via Protect Pike <Prote...@googlegroups.com> wrote:

Really sums it up in a nutshell. Great honest piece. Thank you Sean!

Peggy Owens

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Feb 3, 2022, 9:46:54 PM2/3/22
to Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
Sean 
Thanks for sharing. It is on point and the history gives this the power and urgency.
I went to get free KN95 free masks, they don’t have them store too small parking lot too. If you learn of any please let me know I’ll post.
Be well stay safe 
Peggy O

Lisa Jenkins

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Feb 4, 2022, 8:37:04 AM2/4/22
to Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
It is an intelligent and honest article. And also continues to point out that we just never learn from history. We keep making the same unnecessary mistakes that cost needless lives for no good reason. 

Richard Nichols

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Feb 4, 2022, 9:33:38 AM2/4/22
to Lisa Jenkins, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
Thank you Sean.
When we hear about all of those who are still needing hospitalization because they are unvaccinated and have contracted covid, we forget the health care workers who are having to rise to the occasion...and the people who have other conditions and can't get treatment because doctors are not available....someone in my family is going through that right now . And what could become a very serious condition, needing a specialist, may continue to be put off because some members of the public don't really care about  PUBLIC HEALTH  . And that makes it very scary for all of us.
Thanks for letting me sound off.
Connie

Eve Rosahn

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Feb 4, 2022, 9:39:47 AM2/4/22
to conr...@gmail.com, Lisa Jenkins, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
At a local government meeting in Honesdale (according to the Courier) item 1 on the agenda was keeping the holiday star lit in honor of health care workers. The second item was the elimination of the mask mandate for government meetings. A bit of a contradiction, I'd say

Best,
Eve Rosahn 

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Jerry Carozza

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Feb 4, 2022, 10:39:27 AM2/4/22
to Richard Nichols, Lisa Jenkins, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
The pandemic has become in the United States, an epidemic of the unvaccinated.  For those who are vaccinated, the risk is less than the flue, which is a risk, but we all live with risk when we get in a car, or on a plane. Like so many, I got COVID over the Christmas holiday and for me, triple vaccinated, it was a mild cold.  Mask mandates have run their usefulness and at this point should be abandoned. Masks do more to protect those around the wearer. If those around are vaccinated, they don't need that protection. If they are unvaccinated, then Darwinism will be at play. I feel for children of anti-vaxxers, but children having bad parents and the effects of that on them is a problem that is older than COVID. If someone want to wear a mask, no problem, as long as they are not robbing a bank. Otherwise, it's time for the mandates to go. 



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Subject: Re: [Milford Covid Task Force] Why Wishful Thinking on Covid Remains As Dangerous as Ever | The Nation
 
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Gladys S Stefany

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Feb 4, 2022, 10:54:38 AM2/4/22
to Jerry Carozza, Richard Nichols, Lisa Jenkins, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve

I understand what you are saying but, I would still be more comfortable with mask mandates.  I am fully vaccinated and boosted, but I still wear an N95 when I’m out because other people refuse to mask.  Even if I catch a light case, I can still then spread it to someone else who has been unable to get vaccinated for medical reasons or who has a vulnerability (such as my husband’s COPD).  I went to the nail salon yesterday and was happy to have my N95 on because all kinds of people were walking around unmasked.  Also, even a light case, can give you long Covid and I don’t want any of that.  I wish mandates were in place and upheld by law in order to protect all of us from the ignorant.

 

Gladys Stefany

Erica Manney

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Feb 4, 2022, 10:54:38 AM2/4/22
to Jerry Carozza, Richard Nichols, Lisa Jenkins, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
Just a reminder that children under 5 can’t be vaccinated yet. My kid is 2 and has rarely, if ever been in a grocery store because people aren’t masking. 

It’s also not a mild cold for everyone who is triple vaxxed. 

It’s not just the willfully unvaccinated who are at risk. 

It’s my son. It’s my 8 year old nephew who is medically compromised and can’t be vaccinated. Wearing a mask still protects them, and their lives are valuable too. 


On Feb 4, 2022, at 10:39 AM, Jerry Carozza <gnca...@hotmail.com> wrote:



Jerry Carozza

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Feb 4, 2022, 11:12:35 AM2/4/22
to Erica Manney, Richard Nichols, Lisa Jenkins, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
Children under 5 don't have to go to schools which are one of the places with mask mandate controversy. Soon they will have vaccines available. It's a matter of risk/benefit. Public policy must take that into account. It's not always driven by the extreme cases of hypersensitivity.  


From: Erica Manney <erica....@gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, February 4, 2022 10:54 AM
To: Jerry Carozza <gnca...@hotmail.com>
Cc: Richard Nichols <conr...@gmail.com>; Lisa Jenkins <lisa.j...@hotelfauchere.com>; Sean Strub <sean....@gmail.com>; Protect Pike Listserve <prote...@googlegroups.com>

Lisa Jenkins

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Feb 4, 2022, 11:19:32 AM2/4/22
to Jerry Carozza, Erica Manney, Richard Nichols, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
risk/benefit??? Public health policy should not be a political/capitalistic consideration

Jerry Carozza

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Feb 4, 2022, 11:28:20 AM2/4/22
to Lisa Jenkins, Erica Manney, Richard Nichols, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
Risk/benefit. Or should we outlaw cars, planes, baseball on a hot humid day for fear of lightning strikes. I suppose we could do that. 

From: prote...@googlegroups.com <prote...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Lisa Jenkins <lisa.j...@hotelfauchere.com>
Sent: Friday, February 4, 2022 11:18 AM
To: Jerry Carozza <gnca...@hotmail.com>
Cc: Erica Manney <erica....@gmail.com>; Richard Nichols <conr...@gmail.com>; Sean Strub <sean....@gmail.com>; Protect Pike Listserve <prote...@googlegroups.com>

Sean Strub

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Feb 4, 2022, 11:29:19 AM2/4/22
to Lisa Jenkins, Jerry Carozza, Erica Manney, Richard Nichols, Protect Pike Listserve
It shouldn’t be, but the reality is that there are only so many resources.  In the US, not only do we spend vastly more on healthcare, but also way disproportionately more on end of life care.

Yet tens of millions have no insurance and barely any access to healthcare at all.

To Jerry’s point, for those who disagree with his suggestion mask mandates be ended, when would you suggest the same?

In terms of mandated masking, I think he may have a point in certain venues, even as many will choose to be more cautious.  

But when would others suggest they be lifted?  When deaths fall below a certain rate?  New transmissions? Vax levels get to x?



From my iPhone 

On Feb 4, 2022, at 10:18 AM, Lisa Jenkins <lisa.j...@hotelfauchere.com> wrote:



Frank Tamburello

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Feb 4, 2022, 11:29:19 AM2/4/22
to Jerry Carozza, Richard Nichols, Lisa Jenkins, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
I would just like to sincerely thank the Task Force and Mayor Stfor facilitating the distribution of the home covid test kits last month. I was not feeling well the day I picked up the kit on Friday the 14th at the community center in town. I tested positive the next day…even after taking the precaution of always wearing a mask in public. Thankfully, I was fully vaxxed and boosted and the symptoms passed. 

We are all weary for sure, but having been in Manhattan at the beginning of this pandemic, and hearing ambulance sirens blaring 24/7, and seeing bodies stacked in refrigerated trucks in near Central Park, and seeing corpses buried in Potters’ Field because no one could claim their bodies, and all the zoom funerals from covid that I performed as a clergyman, I’m sorry, but I have no patience for people who 

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On Feb 4, 2022, at 10:39 AM, Jerry Carozza <gnca...@hotmail.com> wrote:



Gladys S Stefany

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Feb 4, 2022, 11:33:19 AM2/4/22
to Sean Strub, Lisa Jenkins, Jerry Carozza, Erica Manney, Richard Nichols, Protect Pike Listserve

Good question….  I would like to see them in place until vax rates reach at least 80%.

Erica Manney

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Feb 4, 2022, 11:59:30 AM2/4/22
to Jerry Carozza, Richard Nichols, Lisa Jenkins, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
Hypersensitivity?

Also, parents of young kids are in an impossible situation. No, they don’t have to go to public school, but for the most part, parents work. So, are we supposed to quit our jobs and stay home? And guess who that will and has disproprortionately impact? 

(And then be told that everyone is lazy and no one wants to work anymore), and if we do, and no one is wearing masks, do we want to talk about delayed development and socialization? No music classes, trips to the grocery store, gym classes— because no one is masked. 

Or do, like so many of us, need childcare? Where our kids are of course, exposed to other families and caregivers who are unmasked.

It’s an impossible situation made worse by the lack of mandates, and support.

It’s not just the schools. 

On Feb 4, 2022, at 11:11 AM, Jerry Carozza <gnca...@hotmail.com> wrote:



Erica Manney

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Feb 4, 2022, 12:04:41 PM2/4/22
to Jerry Carozza, Lisa Jenkins, Richard Nichols, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
No, but we require seatbelts and a driving test, we cancel or rain delay games and put up nets behind home base, and we have an entire FAA and traffic control system.

We can’t mask forever, but I do think there’s a likely combo of vax and transmission rates that make sense, as well as mandatory vaccinations for school and work in healthcare, like they have for smallpox, polio, tdap, etc. 



On Feb 4, 2022, at 11:26 AM, Jerry Carozza <gnca...@hotmail.com> wrote:



Frank Tamburello

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Feb 4, 2022, 12:37:29 PM2/4/22
to Jerry Carozza, Richard Nichols, Lisa Jenkins, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
Sorry, did not finish my sentence. No patience for people who do not protect others. 
Best
Frank Tamburello 

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On Feb 4, 2022, at 11:29 AM, Frank Tamburello <ftamb...@hotmail.com> wrote:

 I would just like to sincerely thank the Task Force and Mayor Stfor facilitating the distribution of the home covid test kits last month. I was not feeling well the day I picked up the kit on Friday the 14th at the community center in town. I tested positive the next day…even after taking the precaution of always wearing a mask in public. Thankfully, I was fully vaxxed and boosted and the symptoms passed. 

aatding

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Feb 4, 2022, 1:00:49 PM2/4/22
to Gladys S Stefany, Sean Strub, Lisa Jenkins, Jerry Carozza, Erica Manney, Richard Nichols, Protect Pike Listserve
I like this idea. 



Sent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone

Jerry Carozza

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Feb 4, 2022, 1:15:44 PM2/4/22
to Erica Manney, Lisa Jenkins, Richard Nichols, Sean Strub, Protect Pike Listserve
Vaccines are the seatbelts, and I use them. I was pro-mask, but I like many others, no longer am. I am staunchly pro-vaccine. You can advocate for masks, but others can advocate against them now and do so on a rational basis. 

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To: Jerry Carozza <gnca...@hotmail.com>
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