
COVID-19 is killing a lot of people. From the announcement of the first confirmed
My longtime friend
The upshot of Bennett's position is that the COVID-19 threat has been wildly exaggerated from the outset. Contrary to every dictionary I can find, he says COVID-19 is not a pandemic, "but we do have panic and pandemonium as a result of the hype of this. And it's really unfortunate. Look at the facts."
Bennett's primary "fact" is that current projections hold that roughly 60,000 Americans will die from COVID-19 (though he thinks it will be less than that). "We're going to have fewer fatalities from this than from the flu," he said. "For this, we scared the hell out of the American people" and wrecked the economy.
Here's the first problem: These projections of COVID-19 deaths take into account the social distancing practices we've enacted -- and they curb the rate of new infections. If we hadn't started taking precautions, those estimates would be (and were) vastly higher. Thus, Bennett botches the concept of causality.
It's like yelling at firemen for all the water damage to your house since all that burned up was a tiny part of your kitchen, without acknowledging that if the firefighters hadn't shown up, the whole house would have burned down.
Over the 87 days from the announcement of the first
The New Atlantis has a helpful chart showing "reported new deaths weekly" The COVID-19 line starts on
To be fair, Bennett doesn't propose that we should have done nothing. He suggests we should have just protected the vulnerable population and kept the economy going. I share his concern about the economy, but
What bothers me more about Bennett's argument isn't his mischievous epidemiological speculation but his theory for why the country is responding to the pandemic the way it is. He argues on TV and in writing that America has been frightened into an unnecessary overreaction by the media and the left. He wants Americans to man up and respond with the sort of courage we showed after the 9/11 attacks, rather than giving in to the "paranoid style in American politics."
That phrase comes from historian
More importantly, the idea that Americans are panicky fraidy-cats strikes me as grossly unfair. Where is the evidence? I see it nowhere in my daily life or in the inspiring stories of courageous health workers and generous citizens. Nor is there much evidence of it in polls, which show overwhelming support for social distancing policies.
Bennett is a famous pro-lifer who sincerely wants to protect the vulnerable unborn. It seems to me the vulnerable born deserve adequate protection too, and the sacrifices Americans are making in that effort aren't fueled by panic or cowardice, but by heroism.
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