Friday, February 18, 2022

How Dr. Mom Learned To Stop Worrying and Love the Plague

 Just in case the inconsistent and contradictory guidelines on masking from Anthony Fauci, liberal America's favorite brusque old grandpa, aren't enough to convince you that Learning To Live With Covid is not a euphemism for Accepting Death Graciously, the New York Times is here to set your minds at rest. 

They've reached out to a select group of lesser epidemiologists and physicians for advice on just how to chill the hell out. These medical professionals are young, they're hip, they're healthy, they're rich, and they know their germs a lot better than mere mortals like you and I do. If they can cope with pursuing their careers and having fun while raising their families, then so can you! 

However, the fine art of ignoring the pandemic does entail a tricky learning curve. Threading the needle on Following the Science® on the one hand and wallowing in rank magical thinking on the other is not a skill that you can learn overnight. Sangfroid in the time of Covid can only be mastered with lot of time and patience. Of course, if you are an actual Covid patient (short, long, or in-between), time might not exactly be on your side. But never mind all that, because the Times article is not directed at you anyway.

It's directed at the hip, the healthy and the hedonistic. Not to mention the financially whole. For example:

 "My (my bold) family has moved away from restricting our activities as the Omicron surge has receded," said Kate Eisenberg, an assistant professor of family medicine at the University of Rochester. "We do not have anyone with high risk health conditions in the household, and we're all vaccinated and boosted."

Eisenberg is currently planning some family trips, including air travel, and she is allowing her 12- and 15-year-old children to participate in most family activities. She has been avoiding indoor dining and crowded indoor settings, but as cases continue to come down, she plans to go out more.

This weekend, she is taking her younger daughter to a sold-out Billie Eilish concert at Madison Square Garden - apparently operating under the delusion that a rock concert in February in New York is not a crowded unventilated indoor setting, and that thousands of gallons of spittle emanating from the orifices of hordes of cheering fans will be magically diverted away from her and her child.

The reporter of this advice column of an article, Jonathan Wolfe, was apparently so heartened and so emboldened by this Dr. Mom and the other hip professionals he interviewed that he even made himself an editorialized part of the story, inserting the following paragraph, right out of the blue:

After we’ve spent two years of living in fear of the virus, being asked to “live with” it now may seem daunting. But in many ways, we’ve been preparing for this moment since the outbreak and it can be easy to forget how far we’ve come.

Dr. Mom Eisenberg is then allowed to chime in again herself, noting that not one of her friends or patients even bothers asking her any more whether it's safe to do this or that. "Most people have settled on their own conclusions about what works for them," she schmoozed to the Times.

Her friends, of course, are not the same kind of people as those Canadian truckers who have reached their own selfish, road-blocking, supply chain-thwarting conclusions about what works for them.  People like Eisenberg and her immediate circle would never dream of blocking traffic as they pursue their exotic getaways and rock concerts. At the very first sign of a sniffle, they have their stash of antiviral pills, and walk-in closets full of test kits. And if there is not a doctor in their actual house, then at the very least they probably have a concierge medic on perpetual call.

As long as we can follow the science® we'll be just fine. It helps immensely, of course, that Doctor Mom and her cohort are not facing eviction or foreclosure and have enough disposable income to take airplane vacation trips and dine out and ignore the plight of the Great Underclass, whose own paltry gains in income have more than been wiped out by inflation, not least by increasing rents and high grocery prices and skyrocketing fuel costs.

All you have to do in Timeswonderland is admit that unlike smallpox, Covid can never be eradicated, not that they even want it to be at this point. As the Times quotes another smugly sanguine epidemiologist as saying, we can continue on our merry ways with "an arsenal of tools" consisting of vaccines, pills and all that wonderful "paid sick leave" that she and her PMC cohort enjoy. Never mind that mandatory paid sick leave is, thanks to the oligarchy-captured US Congress and executive branch and statehouses, not something that the vast majority of US citizens enjoy.

The only arsenal that the ruling class believes in, in fact, is a trillion dollars' worth of lethal war hardware, allocated for the cause of torture and misery and death all over the world, every single year.

And the Democrats and their professional-managerial class base still have the chutzpah to wonder right out loud why the Republicans are winning over the working classes, even as they persist in working with a party that is openly fascist. The two factions each need the other to maintain the oligarchic system.

 House Speaker Nancy Pelosi never seems to tire of saying so herself. How else can she maintain her own maternally therapeutic grip on power?  Like any Doctor Mom, she can't perform her quack-cure without having a preventable disease right there in front of her. And thanks to a long history of political malpractice, the US was sick unto death long before Covid appeared. It's a convenient crisis way too good for either Democrats or Republicans to waste.


6 comments:

  1. Health is a privilege; not a right. USian doctors have learned this lesson well. As a class, they have gladly and contemptuously abdicated all responsibility for public health to the MBAs. These in their turn patiently explain to us how personal responsibility is our responsibility, not theirs.

    Meanwhile, at the NYT, noblesse oblige becomes noblesse oublĂ­ee. We are no longer none of us our brothers' keeper. Perhaps, as Aristotle warned, this is ethical endgame of all empires, but certainly the Anglo-American Empire would be no exception.

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  2. "acceptable losses" through the years

    2020, D. Trump on Covid
    “It affects elderly people. Elderly people with heart problems and other problems. If they have other problems, that’s what it really affects,”

    1964 General "Buck" Turgidson on nuclear war
    "But I do say no more than ten to twenty million killed, tops. Uh, depending on the breaks."

    2001 Mad. Albright on 500k dead Arab kids
    ‘We Think the Price Is Worth It’






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  3. Yes, let's just get back to "normal" while the majority of Americans continue to suffer under the neoliberal hammer.

    "We've been through so much". We deserve a break. Let's book a flight to Maui or maybe a cruise, huh? Gotta get away.

    Thank you Karen for so accurately depicting the absurdity of our national order/disorder. No one does it better.

    As ugly as it is I cannot look away. It's bound to get uglier. Not sure what we can do to force a change for the better. Maybe mass public boycotts? It has to be something that will garner the attention of the capitalist master class (or whatever term you choose). The public will does not exist yet but that can change, if we don't blow the world up first. Cheers.

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  4. Is there a problem with the comments being processed? I tried posting a comment on Sunday, 2/20. Maybe a technical issue or maybe my comment just wasn't approved. Tried to post as mjb.

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  5. Mjb, I apologize for the glitch. I had marked your Sunday comment as approved when I got the email notification but neglected to go on site and confirm that it had been published. I will make sure to verify from now on. And thanks for your kind words!

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  6. So the bottom line is, all "the smartest people in the room" (AKA our government) don't know what to do - and profits are at risk - so their solution is to live with COVID and hope for the best. Sounds like the banking crisis and climate change and all those other issues that are put in the "too hard box."

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