Gordon
L. Weil
On
Covid-19, Americans have been misled, lied to and confused.
In
a crisis, people need clear, concise and authoritative messages from
leadership. This crisis has lacked that.
At
one extreme are politicians who put their careers ahead of the public
good. At the other end are scientists, who must try to explain their
complex work. In the middle are governors who seek to protect both
public health and diverse state economies.
At
the outset, President Trump dismissed the Covid-19 threat, because it
threatened the booming economy on which his reelection depended. His
ignorant assurances allowed the virus to spread unopposed. At this
point, he may been engaging less in outright lying than in wishful
thinking.
When
it became obvious that Trump's “miracle” would not occur and the
disease would keep spreading, Trump's new hope was that a ready cure
would quickly stop it. Without evidence, he began to tout one
medication after another.
The
problem was that some proposed cures could be worse than the virus
and might even cost lives. Though hydroxycholoquine carried
warnings, Trump doubled down on advocating the drug and began taking
it. “What harm can it do?” he asked. It could cause fatal
irregular heartbeats.
Serious
scientists were more truthful. Their warnings about the onset of the
virus were ignored by the White House. Their efforts have focused on
the need to stop the spread by protective measures and the
time-consuming and detailed effort to find a drug to treat the virus
and develop a vaccine.
Science
has rules, because it produces facts. The rules require great care
in order to provide great certainty. “Do no harm” is the first
rule of medicine, so scientists must avoid rushing to conclusions
that could mislead or, even worse, cause harm.
Politicians
have fewer rules and produce fewer facts. That makes them impatient
with scientists. In a crisis as big as Covid-19, the conflict breaks
into the open. Unscrupulous politicians accuse scientists of having
political motives, perhaps because they think everybody does.
Scientists
do not usually lie or intentionally mislead. That puts them at a
disadvantage in a political world. They must do their best not to
alienate political leaders while defending their findings.
Trump's followers soon began to
distrust them, because they did not follow the president's lead.
They were politicized by their critics, some of whom argued that they
lied to support the Democrats. Eventually, they faced a wave of
politically inspired phony science.
Congress
tried to save the situation. It appeared to believe that pouring out
trillions of dollars would fund necessary research and reduce
economic dislocation. But it put funds into the hands of Covid
deniers or favored firms who could dip their hands into the cash flow
as it passed to its supposed recipients.
Many
Americans believed the fine promises and thought that massive federal
spending would help them. Many are still waiting. They learned
that even members of Congress who wanted to help them were misleading
them and perhaps themselves.
Between
the vast flood of federal misinformation and scientists who provide
unwelcome forecasts are governors who are left with trying to protect
their populations. But they also have to find ways to avoid
protective measures destroying their economies.
While
they struggle to find the right policy balance, they may send
confusing messages. Increasingly, they have lined up by political
party. Most Republican governors are more aggressive about reducing
protection, repackaged as “opening” the economy, than are
Democrats. Perhaps they reflect the political will of the more
conservative states they serve.
One
political rule is “when in doubt, don't do it.” A majority of
people, confused and probably fearful, are not “opening” as fast
as Trump and his supporters would like.
In
the absence of clear and consistent presidential leadership,
governors are left to develop policies for
both
vulnerable people and local business. Most of them are probably
sincere in their efforts and try to suit their constituency.
But
the careful efforts of almost all governors of both parties have
returned the crisis, in one view, back to the point where it began –
from “miracle” to “magic.”
"And
they [Democratic governors] think they're taking away Donald Trump's
greatest tool, which is being able to go into an arena and fill it
with 50,000 people every single time, right?” said Eric Trump, the
president's son.
"So
they will and you watch. They'll milk it every single day between now
and November 3, and guess what? After November 3, coronavirus will
magically all of a sudden go away and disappear and everybody will be
able to reopen."
At
last do we have a clear, concise and even hopeful statement on
Covid-19?