Los Angeles Times

Virus fatalism can be fatal

- Warren Furutani Carol Graham

Re “It’s looking like we all might get COVID someday,” Opinion, Jan. 9, and “Amid surge, resignatio­n sets in,” column, Jan. 9

Erika D. Smith and Robin Abcarian addressed the growing fatalistic attitude the public is having about the inevitabil­ity of everyone eventually getting sick with COVID-19.

Whether everyone gets the virus is ultimately not the salient point. The issue is the virus has exacerbate­d already existing inequities in society.

Three groups are disproport­ionately being impacted: people of color (primarily Black and Latino people), the elderly and the poor. The prevalence of obesity, diabetes and hypertensi­on is much higher in these population­s. Access to quality healthcare favors those with private health plans verses crowded public hospitals or clinics.

The fatalistic attitude is growing, but if these communitie­s don’t get vaccinated, they won’t just get sick — it also will be fatal.

Gardena

Abcarian provides interestin­g informatio­n, but she needs to check her partisansh­ip at the door.

First, she says that in July, “President Biden proclaimed, ‘We’ve gained the upper hand against this virus,’ ” and “at the time, it appeared we had.”

Later, she mentions “the former guy’s bluster at the dawn of the pandemic, which has now infected more than 300 million people worldwide: ‘You have 15 people, and the 15 within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero.’ ”

President Biden’s remark was made more than a year into the pandemic; “the former guy” made his comment at the “dawn.”

While I’m not a supporter of the former guy, his comment was made before the things learned since then. Biden continues to make promises he can’t keep, even with the science we have learned since the “dawn of the pandemic.”

Porter Ranch

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