The Denver Post

Social distancing is a privilege

- By Charles M. Blow Charles M. Blow joined The New York Times in 1994 and became an opinion columnist in 2008.

People like to say that the coronaviru­s is no respecter of race, class or country, that the disease COVID-19 is mindless and will infect anybody.

In theory, that is true. But, in practice, in the real world, this virus behaves like others, screeching like a heat-seeking missile toward the most vulnerable in society. And this happens not because it prefers them, but because they are more exposed, more fragile and more ill.

What the vulnerable portion of society looks like varies from country to country, but in America, that vulnerabil­ity is highly intersecte­d with race and poverty.

Early evidence from cities and states already shows that black people are disproport­ionately affected by the virus in devastatin­g ways. As ProPublica reported, in Milwaukee County, Wis., as of Friday morning, 81% of the deaths were black people. Black people make up only 26% of that county.

As for Chicago, WBEZ reported Sunday that “70% of COVID-19 deaths are black,” and pointed out about surroundin­g Cook County, “While black residents make up only 23% of the population in the county, they account for 58% of the COVID-19 deaths.”

The Detroit News reported last week, “At least 40% of those killed by the novel coronaviru­s in Michigan so far are black, a percentage that far exceeds the proportion of African-Americans in the Detroit region and state.”

If this pattern holds true across other states and cities, this virus could have a catastroph­ic impact on black people in this country.

And yet, we are still not seeing an abundance of news coverage or national government­al response that center on these racial disparitie­s. Many states haven’t even released race-specific data on cases and deaths. The federal government hasn’t either.

Partly for this reason, we are left with deceptive and deadly misinforma­tion. The perception that this is a jet-setters’ disease, or a spring breakers’ disease, or a “Chinese virus” as President Donald Trump likes to say, must be laid to rest. The idea that this virus is an equal-opportunit­y killer must itself be killed.

And, we must dispense with the callous message that the best defense we have against the disease is something that each of us can control: We can all just stay home and keep social distance.

As a report last month by the Economic Policy Institute pointed out, “Less than one in five black workers and roughly one in six Hispanic workers are able to work from home.”

As the report pointed out,

“Only 9.2 percent of workers in the lowest quartile of the wage distributi­on can telework, compared with 61.5 percent of workers in the highest quartile.”

If you touch people for a living, in elder care or child care, if you cut or fix their hair, if you clean their spaces or cook their food, you can’t do that from home.

Staying at home is a privilege. Social distancing is a privilege.

The people who can’t must make terrible choices: Stay home and risk starvation or go to work and risk contagion.

And, this isn’t just happening here, it is happening with poor people around the world, from New Delhi to Mexico City.

People can’t empathize with what it truly means to be poor in this country, to live in a too-small space with too many people, to not have enough money to buy food for a long duration or anywhere to store it if they did. People don’t know what it’s like to live in a food desert where fresh fruit and vegetables are unavailabl­e and nutrient-deficient junk food is cheap and abundant.

People are quick to criticize these people for crowding into local fast food restaurant­s to grab something to eat. Not everyone can afford to order GrubHub.

Furthermor­e, in a nation where too many black people have been made to feel that their lives are constantly under threat, the existence of yet another produces less of a panic. The ability to panic becomes a privilege existing among those who rarely have to doit.

I wholeheart­edly encourage everyone who can to stay home, but I’m also aware enough to know that not everyone can or will, and that it is not simply a pathologic­al disregard for the common good.

If you are sheltering in place in an ivory tower, or even a comfortabl­e cul-de-sac or a smartly wellappoin­ted apartment, and your greatest concern is boredom and leftover food, please stop scolding those scratching to survive.

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