Chicago Sun-Times

What’s really ‘out of control’ in Donald Trump’s America? The pandemic

- MONA CHAREN @monacharen­EPPC Mona Charen is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. Her new book is “Sex Matters: How Modern Feminism Lost Touch with Science, Love, and Common Sense.”

President Donald Trump has a point. People are being injured. The property damage runs into the millions. Things are out of control. Local government­s are not able to handle this on their own. It demands a federal response. When sacred things are desecrated, it takes a toll on the national spirit.

Trump thinks this applies to rioters and protesters in Portland and other cities. He thinks the sacred things are Confederat­e monuments. In truth, it’s the coronaviru­s that demands a response — and when it comes to that, the president is AWOL.

Trump is incapable of doing the basics of his job as president, and he is undone by a crisis that requires more than the basics. Flailing and flounderin­g in an emergency that requires sustained attention, comprehens­ion and teamwork, he is resorting to the magician’s trick of misdirecti­on. He is hoping he can get the nation to focus on the lesser problem of mayhem in Portland and other cities (partially by escalating it) to distract from the crushing, monumental screw-up of public health and the economy.

Yes, the economy.

The president claimed credit a thousand times for the strong economy that prevailed during the first three and a half years of his tenure, and perhaps some of that is deserved. It’s possible that the corporate tax cuts stimulated growth, though there are many doubters, and many critics who note the immense price tag handed to our children in terms of increasing deficits. Some believe the deregulati­on push may have boosted productivi­ty.

But it’s also possible that Trump’s economy was just the continuati­on of the expansion that began in 2009. In fact, the average annual GDP growth rate in Trump’s first three years was 2.5%, which is just 0.2% higher than President

Barack Obama’s average (which included the last months of the Great Recession).

Stewardshi­p of the economy requires more than signing a tax cut bill and discouragi­ng over-regulation. It requires peering out over the bow and spinning the wheel hard when you see an enormous iceberg. Trump saw the iceberg. Or at least he should have: It was included in his security briefings for weeks. But Trump refused to take action to save the ship. He told the crew it wasn’t an iceberg, just an ice floe.

The two actions Trump constantly cites to prove that he took the virus seriously were two orders: One to restrict travel to and from China and one to restrict travel to and from Europe. Those may have bought a little time — if he had been planning next steps. But that’s all it did. Obviously, it didn’t prevent the virus from reaching our shores. It couldn’t.

COVID-19 has now been registered in 193 countries around the globe. That’s why it’s called a pandemic. The only places that have escaped infection thus far are remote islands

HE IS HOPING HE CAN GET THE NATION TO FOCUS ON THE LESSER PROBLEM OF MAYHEM IN PORTLAND AND OTHER CITIES (PARTIALLY BY ESCALATING IT) TO DISTRACT FROM THE CRUSHING, MONUMENTAL SCREW-UP OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND THE ECONOMY.

like Samoa and Tonga and mountainou­s enclaves like Turkmenist­an. And it will reach those redoubts eventually.

By denying the dire threat, Trump discourage­d a systematic response from the department­s and agencies tasked with public health. When he did eventually turn his gaze toward the problem, he saw hospitals struggling to cope with shortages of masks, gloves and testing materials, and tens of thousands of Americans dying, and he shrugged, saying governors should handle it. “We’re not a shipping clerk.”

Now, the average daily rate of new infections is 60,000, on the way to a predicted 100,000.

The entire European Union, plus Britain — which has about 200 million more people than the United States — has roughly 2,500 new daily cases.

He made mask-wearing part of the culture war, encouragin­g millions to believe that declining to show considerat­ion for themselves and others was a mark of virility.

When his own CDC director, Dr. Robert Redfield, finally got around to recommendi­ng masks, saying that masks could get the disease under control, Trump contradict­ed him. “No. I want people to have a certain freedom, and I don’t believe in that, no.” A few days later, he tweeted that wearing a mask was “patriotic,” but it was too late to undo the damage already inflicted. How many mask avoiders transmitte­d the virus to others? How many died after contractin­g COVID-19? We’ll never know.

But a bunch of people in Portland are spraying graffiti on buildings, starting some fires and throwing feces at police (which, to be clear, is wrong and should be punished), and the president is sending in the feds. In force. Not only that, but these border patrol officers, wearing fatigues without identifyin­g insignia, are grabbing people off the street and hustling them away in unmarked vehicles. Like in Venezuela.

The president threatens to do the same in Chicago, Detroit, Baltimore, New York and Philadelph­ia. Why? Because it’s a crisis. It demands presidenti­al action. “We’re not going to let this happen to our country,” the leader explained.

 ?? AP ?? President Donald Trump wears a face mask July 11 during a visit to a military hospital after months of refusing to do so and saying mask-wearing was a liberal political statement.
AP President Donald Trump wears a face mask July 11 during a visit to a military hospital after months of refusing to do so and saying mask-wearing was a liberal political statement.
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