Dayton Daily News

We’re not calling it the Jared virus, but maybe we should

- Gail Collins Gail Collins writes for the New York Times.

So our question for today is: What is the appropriat­e attitude toward Donald Trump in a time of national crisis?

A) Rally around the president.

B) Tell your friends about the pandemic response team he dismantled.

C) Put your head down and watch 200 repeats of “Modern Family.”

Come on, get your head up. I know this is tough. It’s definitely a time for Americans to come together. On the other hand, complainin­g about Trump is sort of ... our way of life.

“It’s the last pleasure I have,” whimpered one of my housebound friends.

Compromise: Every time Trump irritates or appalls you, write it down in your Coronaviru­s Diary. After this is all over, we’ll have a contest for the best collection.

Meanwhile, try to divert yourself. Read a great book. Or something less challengin­g — I hear the “Twilight” series was vastly underrated, and this might be a good time to consider bringing back vampires. Or have extremely long discussion­s about Tom Brady leaving the New England Patriots. Even if you don’t know who Tom Brady is, you’ll find it’s soothing.

(The coronaviru­s has been pretty sneaky in managing to simultaneo­usly keep everybody home and end all TV sports. Millions of Americans who don’t watch anything but ESPN are trapped in their living rooms, confronted with nothing but talking heads and mixed martial arts repeats from foreign lands.)

And try to think positive: The governors and mayors are working hard, and Trump’s actually helping some of them out. Congress just passed a coronaviru­s aid package. There are still a lot of deep-state survivors in the federal government who know what they’re doing. Things could possibly, conceivabl­y, be worse.

But don’t go overboard! I am thinking here of Mike Pence, who’s in charge of the government’s coronaviru­s response. This is obviously a very important task, and every day Pence appears at a special press conference to tell us what’s going on while mentioning his boss’s name as often as humanly possible. Once you start counting, it’s hard to focus on anything else.

On Wednesday Pence scored an impressive 16 references to “President Trump,” “the president” and “Mr. President” in four minutes. Shortly below Tuesday’s record of 19 — or 26 if you count answers to two reporters’ questions. Still, you can’t say the man isn’t trying.

Trump himself started off with an insult to China. (“I would like to begin by announcing some important developmen­ts in our war against the Chinese virus.”) The White House and Beijing are having a who-started-it fight, and the president is trying to get even with a Chinese ministry that claims American soldiers brought the disease to Wuhan.

Who would you rather blame, people?

A) China.

B) Bats.

C) Jared Kushner.

No fair picking Kushner. He did help write the Oval Office speech that had everybody swooning with terror. But we are absolutely not going to call it the Jared virus.

Think about it. Last month Joe Biden, who had never won a single primary in three campaigns for president, came in fifth in New Hampshire. That was February, and look at him now. Feel free to see this as a sign that when things seem most terrible, it might just be time for a turnaround.

Bernie Sanders says he is not ending his campaign. He is “assessing.” As are we all, Bernie.

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