Crisis comes with political agenda
By RICK WAGNER
Resolving
issues while opening the state for business after the viral lockdown is
going to be as difficult as dealing with the virus itself.
For
starters, there’s resistance from certain groups to opening anything at
all. Some folks are legitimately concerned about being exposed and
that’s fair, particularly if they fall into the high-risk categories of
being elderly, immune-suppressed or having compromised respiratory
issues.
Others, unfortunately, have more than a
smidgen of a political motive for not wanting the state to open. Some
people can’t let a crisis pass without nailing a political agenda to it.
Before
the emergence of COVID-19, the upcoming presidential election had been
analyzed to be in President Trump’s favor because of a roaring economy.
Lengthening the economic shutdown brought on by the reaction to the
pandemic might damage those re-election odds.Keeping the country in
financial turmoil may not be, on balance, such a bad thing.
That
only makes sense if one believes Donald Trump is so harmful that
letting tens of millions of people continue to suffer financial and
personal mayhem is more appealing than having him president for another
four years.
Even if one
believes that, it’s only a workable theorem if the public is convinced
that their distress should be laid at the door of the president. But it
is unlikely to work, not just because most voters are too smart for that
worn-out tune, but because other influences are at work.
One of those is the public becoming
aware that the “models” of the COVID–19 virus’ impact, in terms of
hospitalizations and lethality, have been wildly incorrect. Yet
government officials continue to use them as motives to dictate policy.
While
the models certainly have been extremely incorrect about most things,
such as respirator requirements, it does not mean our situation is not a
very serious one. It just shows that planning based on repeatedly bad
predictions only makes things worse.
One
wonders if officials are not getting this modeling technique from the
same people doing the climate change models. You know the ones, that 15
years ago, predicted we would be waterskiing across the Grand Canyon by
now. OK, I’m making that one up. Most of the predictions were not that
optimistic.
As increasing
amounts of information leak out, despite efforts to reshape or ignore
it, public patience with those who want to keep people from working is
quickly slipping away.
We see polling that would have us
believe, nonsensically, that most want to stay home. However, reality
and polling have been moving further and further apart and polling
results are now mostly skewed as a weapon to shape public opinion.
We
get a better sense what people are thinking when we examine what they
are doing through things such as people’s activities tracked by their
cellular telephone data, which while creepy, tells us in the last 10
days a substantial upsurge in movement has taken place across the
country and our state.
Most of
the population seems to be analyzing what they see and believe it is
time to move forward, because standing in place is starting to do more
damage than the virus.
We now
have an improved assessment of the damage the virus can do and we have a
solid understanding of the damage financial ruin can produce.
Everyone should be concerned, even those
who mistakenly believe they are less likely to suffer financial damage,
such as those receiving pensions.
In
Colorado, even when the economy was quite good, the public pension
system was only funding about 60% of its obligation and now has $31
billion in unfunded liability.
Pensions
make their money off investments and employee contributions to the
fund. If this financial atmosphere continues, critical changes to
pensions are inevitable.
Despite
the necessity, opening for business still means sensible safeguards are
needed, particularly concerning the very vulnerable and limiting
obvious methods of transmission.
However, draconian measures using
clearly flawed data not only lead to an unhappy populace but drives a
few to be reckless with their precautions, as a type of rebellion.
That
is not good, but generally the mood of the nation seems to be an
appreciation of realistic data and a desire to begin to get back to work
with reasonable protections.
Politicians
who want to stretch this out for political reasons have not learned the
lesson that when the public starts a parade, the smart ones jump in
front. They don’t try to order it back.
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