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Trump’s shifting of the goal posts sounds familiar

- Paul Krugman Krugman is a columnist for The New York Times.

As we head into the final stretch of the election, COVID-19 is on a roll.

Coronaviru­s cases keep hitting records — among other things, five aides to Vice President Mike Pence have tested positive. Hospitaliz­ations, which lag behind cases, are soaring. And deaths, which lag even further behind, are starting to rise too. Put it this way: Just between now and Election Day, we’re likely to lose almost twice as many Americans to COVID-19 as died on 9/11.

So how is the Trump administra­tion responding? Actually doing anything about the pandemic is apparently off the table. What we’re getting instead is a multilevel public relations strategy: We’re doing a great job. Anyway, there’s nothing anyone can do. And besides, doctors are faking the numbers so they can make more money.

These are, of course, inconsiste­nt stories, and the smearing of health care workers who put their lives on the line to save others is just vile. But none of this should surprise us.

This is, after all, Donald Trump. Also, we’ve seen this combinatio­n of denial, declared helplessne­ss and conspiracy theorizing before: Trump and company are following the same strategy on COVID-19 that the right has long followed on climate change.

Almost everyone is familiar with the way Trump keeps moving the goal posts to claim success no matter how bad things get. In February he predicted zero cases “within a couple of days.” In the spring he said that it would go away when the weather got warmer. Lately he’s been claiming triumph because the coronaviru­s hasn’t killed 2.2 million people.

The administra­tion was slower to admit that it was abjectly surrenderi­ng to COVID-19. But back in August Dr. Scott Atlas, a believer in herd immunity — basically letting the virus rip through most of the community — joined the White House coronaviru­s task force.

Atlas is a radiologis­t with no known expertise in infectious disease, and actual epidemiolo­gists like Dr. Anthony Fauci are horrified by his ideas. But Atlas, not Fauci, appears to be calling the shots these days.

And on Sunday Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, made it more or less official, saying that “we are not going to control the pandemic” because it is a “contagious virus.”

This came after a rally in which Trump — who considers himself a victim because the media keep talking about “COVID, COVID, COVID” — claimed that coronaviru­s fatalities are being exaggerate­d because “doctors get more money and hospitals get more money” if they say that COVID-19 was the cause of death.

All of these excuses sound familiar to anyone who has followed the climate debate over the years. According to the right, climate change isn’t happening; anyway, there’s nothing we can do about it without destroying the economy; and it’s all a hoax concocted by a global conspiracy of scientists, who are just in it for the money.

No, the overwhelmi­ng scientific consensus that we’re experienci­ng man-made global warming isn’t being driven by financial incentives — but those who reject that consensus are.

At this point, climate denial is largely sustained by a network of right-wing think tanks supported by fossil-fuel interests; that is, the “experts” claiming either that global warming isn’t happening or that nothing can be done about it are basically profession­al deniers, who make a living as “merchants of doubt.”

And COVID denial, it turns out, isn’t just a similar phenomenon; it’s being conducted by pretty much the same people.

Atlas and other administra­tion officials have reportedly been strongly influenced by the Great Barrington Declaratio­n, a manifesto on behalf of herd immunity that grew out of a meeting at the American Institute for Economic Research. What do we know about this institute?

Well, it is, not surprising­ly, linked to the Charles Koch Institute. And a perusal of its website reveals that until recently it devoted much of its time to climate denial, putting out articles with titles like “Brazilians Should Keep Slashing Their Rainforest.”

Was there ever a chance that Trump would take the pandemic seriously? Probably not. After all, he has always been a die-hard, conspiracy-theorizing denier of climate change, and his coronaviru­s response has come straight out of the climate-denier playbook.

In any case, we can predict with high accuracy what he will do if the polls are wrong, and he wins a second term. He will do nothing at all to fight the pandemic; he will, however, try to suppress the truth about what’s happening.

And many, many more Americans will die.

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