This country is increasingly unmasked in hell. After all, the wealthiest nation on Earth has just hit one million deaths from Covid-19 (and the real number could be higher yet). Meanwhile, globally, according to the World Health Organization, the pandemic death toll has now reached at least 15 million and it isn’t over yet. Not faintly. New variants of Covid-19 continue to arise and there could be more (and possibly worse) to come. In fact, in the U.S., for the first time in a while, the numbers for Covid cases, hospitalizations, and deaths are once again increasing as the latest subvariant of the disease, BA.2, spreads across a country that’s neither vaccinated nor boosted enough and is now unmasking in a major way.
I live in New York City where case numbers are rising rapidly and yet — though this old guy continues to mask — every day in stores, on the subway, wherever I go, I see ever fewer masked people around me. And mind you, on the subject of masking, New Yorkers are relatively good. A friend of mine who recently returned from Texas told me that just about nobody where he went was masked anymore.
That shouldn’t surprise anyone. As an NPR analysis showed last December, almost three times as many people died from Covid-19 in counties that voted heavily for Donald Trump as in those that did so for Joe Biden (and the higher the Trump vote, the worse those numbers got). That should tell you plenty about the subject TomDispatch regular Nina Burleigh, author of Virus, a superb book on the pandemic, faces today: how the Trumpist right-wing has used masking — think: Covid exhaustion — and other pandemic issues to promote its extremist views. (Of course, the recent White House Correspondents Association Dinner, where 2,600 journalists, celebrities, and political types, including the president, packed unmasked into a ballroom in what became a pandemic super-spreader, shows that you don’t have to love Donald Trump to act stupidly.)
As Burleigh suggests, we’re all Covid-exhausted by now, but what a shame if that were to lead not just to the deaths of ever more Americans but of a political system, too. Tom
America Unmasked
Did the Long Pandemic Spawn a New Kind of Repression?
Last month, not long after Florida federal judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle ruled that the transportation mask mandate was illegal, I flew from New York City to Miami. Videos of airplane passengers in midflight ripping off their masks and cheering with joy had already gone viral following the judge’s ruling.
I've traveled domestically and internationally many times since the start of the pandemic and I hate the mask as much as anyone. It makes me sneeze and it tickles. After 10 hours on long hauls, I can indeed feel like I'm suffocating. It can be almost unbearable. But after two years of obediently masking up to enter airports and planes around the world, I found my first unmasked travel experience jarring indeed, even though I kept mine on. I was not the only masked person on that American Airlines flight, but I was definitely in the minority.
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