Forget about being in this all together, united. Protests against public health restrictions have turned ugly.
This morning's (April 29) News & Observer quoted a Reopen North Carolina protester asking, "What will we do when the food runs out?" and answering himself: "We'll eat the health care workers!"
Another protester proclaimed at the Reopen rally outside the Legislative Building: "If we hanged traitors like our forefathers did, we'd all be back at work."
How did this protest effort turn so nasty, so vile, so quickly? The protesters have come prepared. They carry professionally printed signs. They wear costumes or clothing that evoke America and Uncle Sam. Some clothing originated with the Trump campaign. These well-organized protests with a thousand people, parade permits, attorneys, etc. don't just happen. A lot of money and a lot of planning go into them.
These protesters are largely Republicans, and the legislators who express support for the protests are nearly all Republicans, but it seems unlikely that the GOP would risk its political future by vocally and financially supporting a movement opposed by two-thirds of Americans polled.
These protests are aimed at disrupting trust in government, sowing doubts about the competence and fairness of elected officials, and inflaming worries and panic about the future. Even the most vile and insidious of Americans would not join efforts to undermine elections and other democratic elections for ephemeral gains.
It seems likely, though I've seen no evidence of it, that foreign powers intent on weakening American institutions are sowing these seeds of doubt and stirring the fires of anger and hatred this election year. We know, from U.S. intelligence reports, that Russia, China and other nations are using social media and other tools to divide and weaken American institutions and other western democracies. It is logical that these adversaries would use the COVID-19 pandemic to turn Americans against each other and against their own elected officials.
We need to see who is financing and masterminding these protests.
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Saturday, April 25, 2020
Protesters wanting to "Reopen" America risk lives
This post was
published in the Wilson Times April 24, 2020
Barely
a month into North Carolina’s “Stay at Home” order, protests are popping up
across the country, including one in Raleigh that let to an arrest of one
protester.
Protests
in Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania and Utah opposed restrictive executive
orders that required residents to stay home and ordered businesses and schools
to close. All these restrictions are aimed at containing the COVID-19 pandemic
that has infected nearly 7,000 people in North Carolina and killed more than
40,000 in the United States, which now has the highest number of COVID-19 deaths
of any nation.
Protesters
are making two arguments against the anti-pandemic orders that have been
effective, scientists and medical experts agree.
The
first argument is that the executive orders have ruined the nation’s economy.
Many small businesses have shut down because of lack of customers (who are
staying at home as ordered) or inability to obtain merchandise or needed
equipment because of travel restrictions.
The
second argument is that governors’ executive orders violate citizens’
constitutional rights.
The
First Amendment guarantees the right to peaceably assemble, and the Fourth
Amendment protects a right to privacy. The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments allow
limits on life, liberty and property only after due process of law. But the
Constitution allows state governors to issue orders to protect the health and
safety of the population. As I have written before, no constitutional rights
are absolute. Your right to practice your religion will not allow you to engage
in human sacrifice.
These
confinements are supported by constitutional scholars and by epidemiologists.
Although the restrictions may be extremely inconvenient and disappointing (as
travel plans, family reunions, graduations and other events are ruined), stay
home rules, “social distancing” and other measures are the best defense the
states and whole nation have to prevent illness and death, experts at the
Centers for Disease Control say. Polls show that about two-thirds of the public
support measures to contain the virus, despite their harm to the economy.
The
Washington Post and other news sources have identified a number of right-wing
Republican groups and conspiracy theorists who are supporting or igniting the
protests. Even President Trump, who had endorsed the very measures the
governors imposed, reversed course and tweeted “Liberate Michigan,” “Liberate Virginia”
and “Liberate Minnesota.” “Liberate”? Is he advocating violent overthrow of
duly elected governors?
The
virulent protests are dividing the populace into two camps: those who are
willing to risk the lives of others for their own convenience and those who
think their personal inconveniences and economic sacrifices are worth it to
prevent the deaths of hundreds of thousands of others.
At
a time when national unity and global cooperation are needed, the protesters
and their cheerleaders are endangering everyone — your family, your neighbors,
the elderly, the vulnerable. This pandemic has shown its deadly ways can
afflict anyone.
Wednesday, April 22, 2020
Life in the Time of Corona Virus, 4.11.20
This post was published in the Wilson Times April 21, 2020
I wore a mask over my nose
and mouth this morning, the same mask I wore to the grocery store earlier in
the week to protect me from the Corona virus. Today the mask protects my
sinuses from the pollen. I was outside to shovel five big piles of raked and
swept pollen into a compost bin, to be buried in the landfill.
String-like tassels from
three big oaks and comma-shaped pods from a half-dozen pines blanket the lawn
and asphalt driveway.
The trees’ reproductive dust
fell like snowflakes, soft and weightless. The wind picked up, and it was
snowing pollen horizontally, coating cars, streets and outdoor furniture. The
trees’ determination to survive coats my sinuses and my skin.
It took some time to get
accustomed to the mask over my face, but medical professionals recommended them
for everyone, so I complied in the hope that I might not be infected or might
avoid infecting others. Wearing the mask for more than a few minutes tugs at my
ears and requires me to remove the mask to wipe my nose, which drains each
pollen season.
My wife made my mask from
scraps of cloth left from all the years she sewed clothes for our children and
gifts for others. She put the mask together quickly from instructions in a
newspaper. The rumble of her sewing machine resonated through the house for the
first time in months as she worked. Newspapers, which provided the concept and
the pattern, and home sewing machines are both becoming rare. What will we do
at the next pandemic?
For four weeks, the grocery
store has had no facial tissues or toilet paper. Hoarding and panic buying are
to blame, we’re told, but that doesn’t fill the paper products shelf. I recall
during my newspaper days someone telling me that newsprint was just one step
above toilet paper. Maybe we’ll be forced to upgrade to newsprint. Until the
papers we subscribe to quit print publication altogether, I guess we’ll have a
sufficient supply of a necessary product, despite hoarders.
We order takeout from our
favorite local restaurants in the hope that they will survive the stay-at-home
orders that have emptied their dining rooms.
We have developed the habit
of avoiding close encounters with other people so the virus won’t spread. We
are staying home for the same reason. We don’t want to be responsible for
illness or death of others.
We have canceled two trips
we had planned for this year. This was to be the year we would really take
advantage of our free time as retirees. We would travel to places we’d never
seen. We’d cross an ocean for the first time. But an invisible disrupter forced
a revision in our plans. Our planned trips amount to nothing compared to the
potential hazards if we are not vigilant in avoiding other people and washing
our hands repeatedly.
I like being home, a
comfortable, quiet and familiar space. Rules of fashion don’t apply here. I can
wear the same jeans all week, and no one notices. But personal hygiene rules
our lives. I have washed my hands so many times my skin is dry and flaking.
Kitchen counters are cleaner than ever.
But the virus can strike
anyone, and it’s especially dangerous for older people (like us). A cousin’s
friend far away wrote a gut-wrenching account of watching her husband die from
COVID-19. Because of the virus, she was not allowed into his hospital room to
say goodbye, to hold his hand, to give him a last kiss, to share tearful
farewells.
The thought of dying alone
in some hospital isolation ward without any family members in the room, then
forgoing any funeral or memorial that might attract more than 10 people provides
the motivation for me to observe social distancing, wash my hands frequently,
stay home, and wear a face mask when I leave the house.
A pandemic has the power to
change society, culture and civilization. Already, pundits are predicting
changes in retail, governance, travel, Internet use, shopping, civic clubs,
religious observances, funerals, sports event, family reunions and so on.
While everyday life
continues, the virus lurks unseen, waiting for an opening and shading our every
thought. Songwriter John Prine died from COVID-19 last week, leaving these
timely words from my favorite of his songs, “Hello in There”: “But old people
just grow lonesome, waiting for someone to say, ‘Hello in there.’”
Saturday, April 11, 2020
Navy throws captain overboard
This post was published in the Wilson Times April 11, 2020.
That brotherhood of military
veterans, whether they served in combat or not, has detected an odor of
unfairness in the removal of Navy Capt. Brett Crozier from command of the
aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt. Crozier’s relief (essentially firing) was
the result of his persistent appeal to the Navy to get sailors with COVID-19
symptoms off the Roosevelt. Crozier sent an email to Navy brass, urging
officials to let the Roosevelt dock, evacuate the infected sailors and
decontaminate the ship. Instead of protecting the health of the ship’s crew
(there is no way to practice social distancing aboard a warship), the Navy
relieved Crozier of his command and effectively ended his career.
One can argue, as some
critics have, that Crozier was not following the chain of command when he sent
that email, which eventually ended up in a newspaper. Some went even further,
to claim Crozier’s letter might give hostile powers key intelligence about the
ship’s combat readiness.
I spent three years in the
Coast Guard responding to letters from service members or their families who
had written to members of Congress. The complaints were usually about duty
assignments or discipline, along the lines of “My son joined the Coast Guard to
guard the coast; so why is he in Greenland?” My job title was “congressional
correspondent.” I replied to the members of Congress, explaining the Coast
Guard’s circumstances, process or reasoning. Some veteran personnel didn’t like
the idea of accepting complaints outside the chain of command, but we treated the
letters as another information source that deserved our attention. Among the
officers I served under, Crozier’s letter would have launched an informal
inquiry, not a rebuke for working outside the chain of command. If Crozier’s
letter can be categorized as outside the chain of command, it was written only
after repeated efforts through official channels to alert senior staff to the
crisis aboard the Roosevelt.
Criticism of Crozier looked
more suspect after hundreds of crewmembers lined the decks to cheer Crozier as
he left the Roosevelt for the last time. Crozier’s punishment began to look
more severe or even ridiculous, and some high-ranking veterans defended
Crozier.
Then Acting Secretary of the
Navy Thomas Modly lashed out at Crozier this week in language that is entirely
improper for any serious organization, least of all one that depends on group
loyalty. Modly, whoå called Crozier “either naïve or stupid,” apparently feared
getting “crossways with the president,” as his predecessor had, and being
fired, so he did his best to emulate the commander-in-chief’s caustic language
and disrespect for subordinates.
A Navy officer doesn’t get
to command an aircraft carrier without years of vetting through annual fitness
reports and promotion boards aimed at making sure only the finest officers are
given the awesome responsibility of operating a multi-billion-dollar ship with
nearly 5,000 crew members, thousands of lethal weapons, ranging from sidearms
to aircraft, missiles and nuclear weapons.
Modly, who later apologized
for his speech to Roosevelt sailors on Guam and has since resigned, did not
behave like a senior member of the chain of command. Rather, he sounded like a
petulant child, using profanity and claiming Crozier’s actions were a “betrayal.”
That word shows his criticism was not about military matters but about public
relations or politics. In military terms, “betrayal” is a criminal offense, so
it’s not a word to use haphazardly.
The president has preferred
“treason” — a word the Constitution limits to “levying war against” the United
States — as his go-to invective.
Saturday, April 4, 2020
Pandemic will end, but we'll be different
This column was published in the Wilson Times April 4, 2020.
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The Corona Virus COVID-19
has changed our lives, our culture, our habits, our relationships and our
economy more than any other event in my memory, and it’s not over yet.
The threat is real, despite
what some non-scientists might say. The Trump administration estimated this
week that COVID-19 could take 100,000 to 250,000 American lives.
But one day the spread of
the contagion will succumb to medical and scientific efforts to quell the
spread of the disease. People will go back to work. Students will go back to
school. Members will attend church services within the holy places built for
those services. “Social Distancing” will be largely forgotten. Our hands will
not be washed quite so frequently.
But things will have
changed, and we will not revert to life as it was, ante-pandemic. After months
of avoiding direct contact with another human being, of staying away from
social events, of diverting to “virtual” experiences and events, how soon will
we be able to be our old selves again? After seeing empty shelves in our
favorite stores, will our minds be persuaded to hoard bottled water, toilet
paper and candy?
Will restaurants, forbidden
to serve customers at tables, survive on less profitable carryout meals in foam
trays and plastic bags? Will patrons forget the pleasures of being served by a
thoughtful staff in a pleasant dining room, or will they conclude that carryout
meals taste just as good at home? Will the wait staff, unable to survive on
unemployment benefits, still be available?
Perhaps the most profound
changes post-pandemic may be felt in churches. With gatherings of more than 10
people forbidden, churches have, in most cases, canceled their Sunday services
and other events; they have redirected members to online church services held
in empty sanctuaries or pastor’s homes. For some people, the virtual service
will be sufficient, and it’s so much more efficient. For members of liturgical
churches, accustomed to observing the Eucharist, the central sacrament of the
church, each week or more often, will welcome the return to the bread and wine
with its spiritual presence of Christ.
Once the habit of attending
church and supporting the church with donations in the offering plate, will
people assume their old habits, or will they drift away from churches,
extending a trend among major denominations over the past 75 years?
Likewise, schools that have
been forced to do much more online are likely to continue to shift more and
more courses and instruction to virtual classrooms. This will affect teachers and
other school employees and will have a large effect on local and state budgets.
Done right, this transition could make schooling better and less expensive.
But if elected officials see
only an opportunity to cut costs, education will suffer. More spending will be
needed in internet access and bandwidth to ensure that all students can attend
online classes from school or from home. The UNC system boasts 50,000 online
courses, most having started before the pandemic.
Schools may be tempted to replace
curriculum with digitally centered courses, but classic literature should
continue to be taught. Shakespeare’s plays are 500 years old. Homer’s
description of the Trojan War is more than 2,000 years old. Insights into human
nature in both classics are relevant today.
The opportunity to update
education is just one benefit from the pandemic. Another is the public’s
reluctant discovery of walking as exercise. I am seeing many new faces walking
in my neighborhood. You can’t go to the gym, shopping is no longer entertainment,
and you can’t travel much. But you can walk, and walking includes nature,
neighborly conversations and improved weight control and physical fitness.
With luck and vigilance, we
might see preventive measures eased in the fall or early winter, but we will
all have to accept how much has changed and realize the virus could make an
unexpected comeback.
Hal Tarleton is a former editor of The Wilson Daily
Times. Contact him at haltarleton@myglnc.com.