From today's New York
Times, on the cost in lives of delaying the nation's coronavirus response, we see a damning indictment of Donald Trump's lies and disinformation.
By the final days of February, many public health experts were sounding the alarm about the coronavirus, and some people were listening.
|
On Feb. 26, he said — incorrectly — that the number of cases was “going very substantially down, not up.” As late as March 10, he promised: “It will go away. Just stay calm. It will go away.”
|
Some local leaders also continued to urge business as usual. In early March, Mayor Bill de Blasio told New Yorkers to “get out on the town despite coronavirus.”
|
If the U.S. had enacted social-distancing measures a week earlier than it did — in early March rather than mid-March — about 36,000 fewer Americans would have died, the study found. That’s more than one third of the current death toll, which is about 100,000.
|
If the measures had been in place two weeks earlier, on March 1, the death toll would be 54,000 lower.
|
|
By The New York Times |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment