New York Post

Times Wildly Exaggerate­s COVID in NYC

- STEVE CUOZZO

PICKING on The New York Times these days is almost too easy, as the Gray Lady routinely renounces or corrects false articles and podcasts and fires staffers who aren’t woke enough for its Twitter masthead.

The Times should next cancel its daily “Coronaviru­s Tracker,” which posts infection rates and related data from across the nation.

It claims, and has for weeks, that there’s an “extremely high risk level” and an “extraordin­arily severe outbreak” of the bug in Gotham. The Times says that it relies for its Big Apple numbers “primarily on reports from the state,” as well as from “health districts or county government­s.”

This week, the paper cited an 8 percent test-positivity rate in the five boroughs, based on a 14-day average. The problem: The state data on which the Times says it mainly relies this week cited a seven-day average in the city of 4.39 percent and falling — the lowest rate since Nov. 28. In Manhattan, the most densely populated borough, the sevenday average was a mere 2.59 percent.

The tracker acknowledg­es that city infecespec­ially tions, deaths and hospitaliz­ations have decreased in recent weeks. But the levels to which the Times says they’ve fallen are still wildly overinflat­ed. While there are fudge factors in any source of COVID-19 data, the Times’ claims seem bonkers — because they are.

It’s tricky to compare the Times’ curious findings with those of other American cities, for the simple reason that its tracker doesn’t include positivity-rate data for other cities. It does so only for states and counties, a fudge factor that obscures how out-of-the-box its Gotham data are.

According to their own official figures, most major US cities have positivity rates much higher than New York City’s. It’s 5.88 percent in Miami and Philadelph­ia; 9.44 percent in Palm Beach; 15.1 percent in Houston; 16 percent in Kansas City. In Los Angeles County, it’s 6.7 percent.

The Times’ overblown New York warnings must be viewed in context of the Gray Lady’s wider lock-down-the-world agenda. The paper rarely reports unqualifie­d hopeful news about taming the virus, whether in The Bronx, Europe or Africa. When it does, the good news is shaded with warnings about mutant strains, rare instances of people who fall ill after being inoculated or the supposed resistance of millions to getting the shots.

A story on Feb. 16 about severe inflammato­ry damage the virus may cause in young people accurately termed the condition “rare.” Near-nonexisten­t is more like it. The story cited 2,060 cases in 48 states. Those represent an infinitesi­mal share of the nation’s 27.7 million reported cases: or less than eight one-1,000ths of 1 percent. Yet the story ran on page one and was trumpeted online under the headline “COVIDLinke­d Syndrome in Children Is Growing and Cases Are More Severe.”

The Times’ sensationa­list approach often inflames other outlets — as it did when the tale appeared on local newscasts hours later without a hint of context.

The Times needs to make the plague seem even worse than its horrific reality to bolster its case for more lockdowns and restrictio­ns, in New York City, where the paper has editoriali­zed (not only on its editorial page but in tendentiou­s news stories) against restaurant reopenings at a scant 25 percent indoor capacity.

A column by restaurant critic Pete Wells this week stated, “Some public-health experts believe that now, even outdoor dining in New York City is unsafe while the local risk . . . remains very high.”

Yes, some restrictio­ns are necessary. But lockdowns remain fashionabl­e mainly among those who favor government control over private enterprise, even as infection and death rates are plunging and vaccines promise to curb the virus for good. Lockdowns give vast power to elected officials who can forbid reopenings in any realm — schools, restaurant­s, sports, houses of worship — unless they’re on the politician­s’ terms, whether or not they have anything to do with public safety.

“Governors are easing restrictio­ns at exactly the wrong time,” a Times editorial was headlined last week. Fabricatin­g an “extraordin­arily severe” virus outbreak is exactly what our struggling city doesn’t need.

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