“Jesus is My Vaccine.”
By Lawrence Davidson
July 02, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - If I told you that
Covid-19 was sparking recently reported episodes of
madness here in the U.S., what do you imagine would be
the reason? Maybe it would be the consequences of
isolation. If you are alone and have few resources,
lockdown might send you over the edge. Maybe it would be
the pandemic’s impact on those with chronic
hypochondria. This is obviously not an easy time to be
stuck with an irrational fear of disease. Or maybe it is
coming from the fundamentalist crowd (both Christian and
Jewish) who believe that Covid-19 is the wrath of God
yet can’t figure out why it is being visited upon their
congregations. If you guessed any of these possible
etiologies, you would missing the main cause.
So what is mainly causing the present outbursts of
madness? It turns out to be a perverted concept of
freedom. It is an insistence that, in the midst of a
pandemic, temporarily closing down businesses, mandating
the wearing of masks, and maintaining social distancing
is an intolerable infringement on individual rights. If
you would like a visual snapshot of the emotion behind
this belief,
just take a look at the gun-toting, maskless
protesters at the Michigan state legislative building in
early May. They are shouting irately about state
tyranny, into the faces of masked guards. Other
anti-mask protesters around the country revealed a
similar off-the-wall attitude,
with signs and banners ranging from the nonsensical
to the scary: “Give me Liberty or Give me Covid-19,” and
in contradiction, “Covid-19 is a Lie,” “Sacrifice the
Weak—Reopen,” and “Jesus is My Vaccine.” There is one
other rightwing anti-Covid protest sign that must be
noted. This one showed up both at the Michigan rally and
one in Chicago: ‘Arbeit Macht Frei,” or “Work will make
you free.” It is the slogan that stood at the entrance
to the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz.
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Part II—A Perverse Notion of Freedom
This perverse notion of freedom is wholly
individualistic. That is, it makes no reference to
community rights or needs. This point of view is not
restricted to armed anarchists or disgruntled religious
fundamentalists. Some quite prominent and successful
proponents of this view go so far as to deny the reality
of society, per se. Such a denial makes government,
particularly in the form of the welfare state, a
freedom-denying effort at social control. Also, if
society is an illusion, then an institution that taxes
the individual for its upkeep is little more than a con
artist.
The British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was an
advocate of this outlook. Here is how she put it: “I
think we have gone through a period when too many people
… understand that if they have a problem, it is the
government’s job to cope with it!… ‘If I am homeless,
the government must house me!’ and so they are casting
their problems on society and who is society? There is
no such thing! There are individual men and women and
there are families and no government can do anything
except through people and people look to themselves
first. …There is no such thing as society.” This is
faulty logic. Some problems, like poverty and
homelessness, can only be understood and dealt with
within a societal context. Thatcher would have none of
that. Since society does not really exist, problems with
societal roots can’t be real either. If Thatcher were
alive today, she would probably admit that the Covid-19
pandemic was very real, but otherwise would be reluctant
to deal with it in any collective manner—just as are our
perverse defenders of “freedom.”
Part III—Beyond Sloganeering
The madness of these rightwing provocateurs is
largely ideological in the Thatcher sense. It is also
underlaid with a strong selfishness that really has
nothing to do with economic hardships of lockdown. What
they are saying is that “I don’t care about other
people. I don’t want to wear a mask and social distance,
and you can’t make me.” It is the ideology of selfish
children and this attitude can drive people to act out
in the same way it drives five-year-olds to have temper
tantrums. Unfortunately, these protesters are not just
children and their acting out goes beyond sloganeering.
Since April 2020, numerous public health workers,
particularly those with policy-making input, have faced
threats and intimidation. Sometimes this is through
e-mail or Facebook or over the phone. Sometimes it is
having to face an armed mob at your front door. Here are
a few
recent examples:
—Lauri Jones, director of public health in a county
in western Washington state, followed up on someone
breaking a Covid-19 quarantine. Immediately she faced a
barrage of threatening calls and e-mails from not just
her home area but from around the country. Her address
was posted on Facebook. She called the police and had to
set up surveillance cameras at her home.
—Amy Acton, Ohio’s public health director “endured
months of anger against the state’s preventive measures,
including armed protests at her home.” One Republican
legislator called her a Nazi (Acton is Jewish) and
another labeled her a dictator. She has since quit her
job and now consults for the state’s health department.
—Georgia’s public health director has been assigned
an armed guard.
—Pennsylvania’s secretary of health, who is
transgender, has been publicly harassed for her role in
fighting the pandemic. One Republican county official
said that he was “tired of listening to a guy dressed up
as a woman.”
—Then there is the emotion expressed following a
recent
Palm Beach county commissioners meeting. The
commissioners had voted unanimously to make masks
mandatory in the county. Those in the audience denounced
the commissioners and threatened them with “citizen’s
arrest.” They made the following accusations: “masks are
killing people,” masks “toss God’s wonderful breathing
system out the window,” and to mandate masks is to
follow the “devil’s laws.”
Perhaps the best
summing up of this “demoralizing” nationwide
situation comes from Theresa Anselmo, executive director
of the Colorado Association of Local Public Health
Officials—eighty percent of whose members have been
threatened with dismissal or were outright fired from
their jobs. “We’ve seen from the top down that the
federal government is pitting public health against
freedom, and to set up that false dichotomy is really a
disservice to the men and women who have dedicated their
lives . . . to helping people.”
Part IV—Lethal Consequences
Ideally, we are supposed to teach our kids that
freedom comes with responsibility. Take away a sense of
responsibility to others and what you are left with the
perverted freedom to be selfish. And, often that
selfishness is blind to its own lethal consequences.
There is a precedent for this sort of selfishness
tied to a perverse claim of freedom—it is the American
insistence that gun ownership is a right and a primary
symbol of freedom. Here in the U.S.,
an average of 109 people a day are killed with guns,
sometimes in quite spectacular fashion, as in the case
of mass shootings. We endure it, or perhaps more
accurately we choose to ignore it, because an
influential, militant and bullying minority has stymied
the political will to reign it in. This is a situation
that is suggestive of willful madness. The same appears
to be happening in the case of Covid-19.
In the last six months
over 2 million Americans have fallen ill with
Covid-19 and the death toll stands at around 130,000.
The present infection and fatality rates are climbing.
It seems that after several months of lockdown, which
had hurt the economy and increased unemployment while
simultaneously bringing the pandemic under control, the
will to continue restrictions has largely broken down.
Both politicians and the populace appeared to have given
up and, as one of those sloganeering signs put it,
silently agreed to “sacrifice the weak and reopen.” And
almost everywhere they did reopen, the Covid-19 virus
returned with a vengeance. It was when a moderate state
counter-response, mandating masks and social distancing
in public and business environments, was attempted that
the militant bullying by Republican politicians, armed
“patriots,” and disgruntled religious fundamentalists
picked up steam. What now is likely to follow?
Future prospects are described by Dr. Megan Ranney,
an emergency physician and Brown University professor
who promotes gun violence prevention.
She explains that the “dynamics of the lockdown
protesters” are similar to those of the gun rights
advocates. Both groups of militants “moved the … debate”
from a conversation about, first an epidemic of gun
injuries, and now the wisdom of health and science in
the face of a pandemic, to “a conversation about
liberty.” Thus we are no longer talking about “weighing
risks and benefits” and are instead involved in “a
politicized narrative” about alleged individual rights.
This is also a zero-sum narrative because this claim of
prioritized rights is, for its advocates, not
negotiable.
So there we have it. It is a fight between a perverse
notion of freedom and a collective sense of social
responsibility. The interests of society—which are real
despite the rhetoric of the late Margret
Thatcher—already lost out once in the struggle with “gun
rights” advocates. Will it lose out again to mad
opponents of masking and social distancing? The chances
are good that it will. Sickness and death may well be
our fate until science, in the form of an adequate
vaccine, saves us from ourselves.
Lawrence Davidson is a retired
professor of history from West Chester University in
West Chester, Pennsylvania. He is the author of
Islamic Fundamentalism, Cultural Genocide and has
focused his academic research on American foreign
relations with the Middle East.
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