It
looks as if we’ll have to spend a few more weeks holding our distance.
The
White House has extended the social distancing period through the end of April
as COVID-19 infection rates soar and the death toll mounts. So much for business as usual by Easter.
Aside
from the drawbacks of “remote instruction,” to use the fashionable euphemism
for teaching while campuses remain shut, my day-to-day is similar to that of
summer. It’s no hardship staying
in. I have enough food on hand, I’m
getting enough sleep, and I don’t have to commute.
Which
doesn’t mean I’m not following the rapidly developing narrative surrounding
COVID-19 or am unaffected by it. I know
I’m okay having self-isolated for over two weeks. I am very thankful that no students or colleagues
have tested positive (at least as far as I’m aware). Our county of just under 100,000 residents has
only a dozen confirmed cases as of yesterday and no deaths to date. Our community hospital assures us it can meet
the challenge posed by the outbreak. But
what we’re reading in the news, not to mention listening to the ominous
drumbeat of the 24-hour TV news cycle, is enough to wear the strongest nerves.
A
month’s worth of cautious self-assurance that we will weather the crisis and
move forward all the stronger is beginning to wane. My reluctance to venture out is growing. I’ve postponed shopping for today’s wants in
favor of actual needs down the way. Even
a week ago I would have said I wanted to stay home to avoid other people’s
craziness rather than the coronavirus itself.
Now I’m planning my next outing to make as few stops as necessary, to
buy packaged and canned goods rather than fresh produce, and then to go
straight home and wash my hands.
Thoroughly.
And
yet, there are many signs of normalcy.
Neighbors come and go. One story
in my newsfeed offered that 2/3 of us are still showing up for their “essential”
jobs. I live near an interstate, and in
the middle of the night I can hear semi traffic in the distance. (Another story in my feed quotes over-the-road
truckers as saying they’re working more efficiently now there are fewer cars on
the roads. That means retail outlets are
surely being stocked. Someone should tell the toilet paper hoarders.)
But
in the midst of all this are the numbers.
Dr. Fauci’s prediction that 200,000 may die in the U.S., the ventilator and
testing kit shortages, and the swath the disease is cutting in the hardest hit
places like Italy and Iran ratchet anxieties.
The
media provide mixed signals which contribute to the confusion. Local news broadcasts are as chipper as ever. Commercials still run for businesses those affected
by shelter in place orders can’t patronize, automakers still try to sell us new
cars and insurers car insurance, and TV programming remains its inane
self. On the other hand, the “shelter in
place” installments of The Daily Show, purportedly recorded from the homes
of Trevor Noah and other cast members, fall a bit flat trying to wrest humor
from current events. (The past couple of
weeks have reinforced my belief that standup and sketch comedy only work in
front of a live audience.)
So,
it’s pretty tough right now to know what to think or feel. Then again, some people are quite certain as to how
to react. Although my mountain resort
town has respectfully urged visitors to stay away, feedback from other
communities in the region indicates a more aggressive stance. People in one town are pressuring law
enforcement to set up checkpoints on the roads leading in. A Facebook post suggested slashing the tires
of out of town cars. One local official
told a reporter she was afraid someone was going to get shot given the
xenophobia prevalent in her county.
As
far as they’re concerned, the folks coming uphill won’t be kept from the second
homes on which they pay taxes. One part
time resident who couldn’t leave her high-powered gig to shelter out here
offered her place on Airbnb, advertising it as a place the prospective guest
could wait out the crisis in safety. The
listing was quickly taken down after a backlash.
The
official who worried people might get shot isn’t being dramatic or
alarmist. In my state, gun shop owners
have demanded the governor classify them as essential workers, with the vocal
support of assorted Friends of the Second Amendment. Firearm and ammunition sales have spiked in
the last month. Soundbites and article quotes
give the impression some of the purchasers are eagerly anticipating a breakdown
of order.
Fear
can be a useful response. It’s what allowed
our prehistoric ancestors to survive, and it can do the same for us. The important thing is to temper fear with
judgment and reason. Unless you’re
directly faced with an existential threat and must act immediately and
decisively, there is time for risk analysis.
Certain
habits born of experience help, too. I’ve
been able to stay home for seventeen days and counting because I came home to a
full cupboard, fridge, and freezer. As a
kid that was not always the case, so my routine as an adult is to augment my
weekly food shopping with staples or household items that haven’t run out but
will in coming weeks. I wasn’t planning
on being confined at home and I did not buy in hoarder quantities. But I had enough to last long enough to
minimize outside contact during the first part of the crisis.
Naturally,
there were and are a few underlying assumptions. One was that I would have essentials like
running water, electricity, and gas.
(Check, at least so far.) Another
is that retail businesses will stay open and properly stocked. (We’ll see.)
And so, while I’m naturally cautious I probably would be in a bad place
if a full-scale catastrophe struck.
So
would you, most likely, though the preppers would be happier than pigs in shit
should the unthinkable occur. There is
an unspoken faith in the systems that sustain us. The COVID-19 pandemic is causing people to
question for the first time whether they are robust enough to get us through
and not just those on the fringes. I am
very reluctant to entertain the possibility of a disease-driven societal
collapse reminiscent of The Stand.
However, even a partial, temporary collapse such as that after Hurricane
Katrina multiplied across several regions would shake public confidence to the
point where we might see our society permanently transformed and not in the way
armchair idealists like me would prefer.
Some
of what’s happening was foreseeable and thus preventable, and some of it
not. The New York Times reported
this week that the federal government had contracted with a medical device startup
back in the late aughts to manufacture a reserve supply of respirators to meet
a potential emergency; following a series of corporate acquisitions and mergers
and attempted contract renegotiations this never came to pass. That was an
attempt at foresight, sabotaged by corporate capitalism though it ultimately
was. The novel coronavirus, as the name
implies, was not specifically foreseen and could not have been because we
cannot predict evolution. But if plans
had gone as planned, we would have had a better response to COVID-19 than we’ve
had.
Past experience with numerous outbreaks affords a
roadmap—H1N1 in 2009, SARS and MERS before that, the 1967 Hong Kong flu, not to
mention the big daddy of ‘em all, the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918-19—but hindsight
is myopic. Or if we do remember the epidemic
spectre, it tends to be PR embarrassments such as the 1976 swine flu fiasco. Then there’s the fact that both culturally and
a matter of business practice we plan for the short to mid-term but seldom for the
long haul.
I
don’t know what to make of it all. I’m just holed up in my modest abode waiting
for the next development. There’s some
distancing you can’t pull off.
©
2020 The Unassuming Scholar
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