Our Pathetic Herd Immunity Failure
That victory required national cohesion, voluntary sacrifice for the common good and trust in institutions and each other. America’s response to Covid-19 suggests that we no longer have sufficient quantities of any of those things.
In 2020 Americans failed to socially distance and test for the coronavirus and suffered among the highest infection and death rates in the developed world. Millions decided that wearing a mask infringed their individual liberty.
This week my Times colleague Apoorva Mandavilli reported that experts now believe that America will not achieve herd immunity anytime soon. Instead of largely beating this disease it could linger, as a more manageable threat, for generations. A major reason is that about 30 percent of the U.S. population is reluctant to get vaccinated.
We’re not asking you to storm the beaches of Iwo Jima; we’re asking you to walk into a damn CVS.
Americans have always been an individualistic people who don’t like being told what to do. But in times of crisis, they have historically still had the capacity to form what Alexis de Tocqueville called a “social body,” a coherent community capable of collective action. During World War I, for example, millions served at home and abroad to win a faraway war, responding to recruiting posters that read “I Want You” and “Americans All.”
That basic sense of peoplehood, of belonging to a common enterprise with a shared destiny, is exactly what’s lacking today. Researchers and reporters who talk to the vaccine-hesitant find that the levels of distrust, suspicion and alienation that have marred politics are now thwarting the vaccination process. They find people who doubt the competence of the medical establishment or any establishment, who assume as a matter of course that their fellow countrymen are out to con, deceive and harm them.
This “the only person you can trust is yourself” mentality has a tendency to cause people to conceive of themselves as individuals and not as citizens. Derek Thompson of The Atlantic recently contacted more than a dozen people who were refusing to get a Covid-19 vaccine. They often used an argument you’ve probably heard, too: I’m not especially vulnerable. I may have already gotten the virus. If I get it in the future it won’t be that bad. Why should I take a risk on an experimental vaccine?
They are reasoning mostly on a personal basis. They are thinking about what’s right for them as individuals more than what’s right for the nation and the most vulnerable people in it. It’s not that they are rebuking their responsibilities as citizens; it apparently never occurs to them that they might have any. When Thompson asked them to think in broader terms, they seemed surprised and off balance.
The causes of this isolation and distrust are as plentiful as there are stars in the heavens. But there are a few things we can say. Most of the time distrust is earned distrust. Trust levels in any society tend to be reasonably accurate representations of how trustworthy that society has been. Trust is the ratio of the times someone has shown up for you versus the times somebody has betrayed you. Marginalized groups tend to be the most distrustful, for good reasons — they’ve been betrayed.
The
other thing to say is that once it is established, distrust tends to
accelerate. If you distrust the people around you because you think they
have bad values or are out to hurt you, then you are going to be slow
to reach out to solve common problems. Your problems will have a
tendency to get worse, which seems to justify and then magnify your
distrust. You have entered a distrust doom loop.
A lot of Americans have seceded from the cultural, political and social institutions of national life. As a result, the nation finds it hard to perform collective action. Our pathetic Covid response may not be the last or worst consequence of this condition.
How do you rebuild trust? At the local level you recruit diverse people to complete tangible tasks together, like building a park. At the national level you demonstrate to people in concrete ways that they are not forgotten, that someone is coming through for them.
Which brings us to Joe Biden. The Biden agenda would pour trillions of dollars into precisely those populations who have been left out and are most distrustful — the people who used to work in manufacturing and who might now get infrastructure jobs, or the ones who care for the elderly. This money would not only ease their financial stress, but it would also be a material display that someone sees them, that we are in this together. These measures, if passed, would be extraordinary tangible steps to reduce the sense of menace and threat that undergirds this whole psychology.
The New Deal was an act of social solidarity that created the national cohesion we needed to win World War II. I am not in the habit of supporting massive federal spending proposals. But in this specific context — in the midst of a distrust doom loop — this is our best shot of reversing the decline.
Agudah Fresserette
ReplyDeleteAn adviser to Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu is suspended following reports she visited relatives of Meron disaster victims & asked them to film videos expressing their support for Bibi & wife Sara, Channel 12 reports.
The network reported that Rivka Paluch, a Bibi adviser on Haredi affairs, delivered condolence letters from Bibi to mourners following the tragedy & asked relatives for a video “to say something to the PM.”
The network said Paluch asked family members to also “say a few things to Sara Netanyahu, for everything they're doing to her, strengthen her.” It's unclear what Paluch was referring to regarding Sara, though the PM’s family's long alleged cruel treatment by the media.
The PM's Office told the network it's investigating, stressing it never asked Paluch to film such videos. Paluch's suspended from her position, Channel 12 reports & as such the visits to the bereaved families were halted.
Channel 12 aired part of a video in which a relative of someone killed at Meron is seen praising Bibi for his work over the years.
Meanwhile, Paluch claims it was the families that requested to film the videos, in order to deliver a message to Bibi, Channel 12 reports.
The Fressers have some sick fantasy narrative of who's to blame that mentions nothing below:
ReplyDeleteAuthorities today detained for questioning 2 engineers involved in approving Lag BaOmer arrangements last month where 45 people were crushed to death & 150 hospitalized.
Investigators from Lahav 433 national crime unit brought in the safety engineer & the safety adviser who signed off on the festival at Mt Meron. It marked the 1st formal questioning by police as they probe the disaster.
Police also searched the offices of the engineers in the Arab town of Ka’abiyye for relevant documents, Channel 13 reports.
Attorney General Mandelblit announced a joint team from the Police & Justice Ministry’s Police Internal Investigations Dept (PIID) will lead a probe into the deadly incident.
In a statement, Mandelblit said the team will be assisted by the State Attorney’s Office, including stand-in state prosecutor Amit Aisman.
Police & PIID had already launched independent probes. State Comptroller Englman also announced his office is investigating.
There have been increasing demands for a state commission of inquiry into the tragedy, with focus on organizing the annual event.
Though political leaders, including Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, demand a 'thorough' investigation, so far there has been no move to set up a commission of inquiry. Bibi & others are accused of fearing such a commission would find evidence implicating them, hence their lip service does not translate to action on fully investigating.
The incident came as Israel's under a transitional govt following the March election. A bloc of parties negotiating to form a coalition to replace Bibi, reportedly intends to establish a commission should it succeed forming a govt.
The mountain, the 2nd-most visited site in Israel after the Western Wall, has become an autonomous zone of sorts, with various Haredi sects organizing their own events & access arrangements, with no overall supervision & police routinely pressured by cabinet ministers & Haredi politicos not to object.
Former police officials said there'd long been fears tragedy could strike as a result of the massive crowds & lack of control.
Multiple reports indicate immense pressure by Haredi lawmakers on Bibi - even political blackmail - ahead of festivities to ensure there would be no limits placed on the number of attendees.
100,000+ Haredim ultimately attended. A Health Ministry framework in consultation with other govt officials & police, to limit to 9,000 participants was not implemented.
https://www.israel365news.com/190402/new-tel-aviv-university-study-finds-that-facebook-and-whatsapp-have-significantly-altered-the-attitude-of-the-ultra-orthodox-jewish-community-toward-sexual-abuse/
ReplyDelete