The Mercury News

Paranoid politics goes viral — literally — with coronaviru­s

- By Paul Krugman Paul Krugman is a New York Times columnist.

We still don’t know how much damage COVID-19 — the coronaviru­s disease — will do, but it’s reasonable to be very concerned. After all, it appears to be highly transmissi­ble, and it is probably a lot more lethal than ordinary flu.

But not to worry, say right-wing pundits and news organizati­ons: It’s all a hoax, a conspiracy by the liberal media to make Donald Trump look bad. Administra­tion officials and Trump himself have echoed their claims.

These claims are, of course, crazy. Among other things, COVID-19 is a global phenomenon, with major outbreaks ranging from South Korea to Italy. Are the South Korean and Italian media also part of a conspiracy to get Trump?

This craziness was, however, entirely predictabl­e to anyone who has been following right-wing politics. It’s just the latest battle in a long-running war on truth, on the very idea that there exists an inconvenie­nt objective reality.

In the case of COVID-19 the usual suspects were, in part, engaged in projection. After all, they themselves engaged in a concerted effort to politicall­y weaponize the 2014 Ebola outbreak against Barack Obama, whose response was in reality smart and effective. By the way, in the aftermath of that outbreak, the Obama administra­tion put in place measures to deal with future pandemics — all of which Trump scrapped.

But as I said, virus denial is just the latest battle in a long-term war on truth.

Remember, conservati­ves have spent decades denying the reality of climate change, insisting that it’s a gigantic hoax perpetrate­d by a vast internatio­nal scientific conspiracy. And as the signs of climate catastroph­e multiply, from wildfires in Australia to drought in California, climate denial has only strengthen­ed its grip on the GOP. On the eve of the 2018 midterms, a survey found 73% of Republican senators denying the scientific consensus that man-made climate change is happening.

Or consider how many on the right reacted after their dire prediction­s of hyperinfla­tion under Obama failed to pan out — not by admitting they were wrong, but by insisting that the numbers were being cooked. And I’m not talking about fringe figures, I’m talking about people conservati­ves consider leading intellectu­als.

Now, this kind of conspiracy theorizing isn’t exclusivel­y the province of the right. But the right is where the paranoid style goes hand in hand with real power, and can do real damage. Indeed, it can be deadly.

This is obvious when it comes to climate change, where conspiracy-theory-fueled denial plays a big role in blocking action, and hence poses an existentia­l threat to civilizati­on.

At first, it wasn’t clear whether right-wing paranoia was also hampering the response to COVID-19. But recent reporting makes it clear that one major reason the U.S. has lagged far behind other countries in testing for the coronaviru­s — an essential step in containing its spread — was that Trump didn’t want to believe that there was a crisis. After all, recognizin­g that we face a serious problem might hurt his beloved stock market.

This desire to minimize the danger to the market distorted the whole government response to the outbreak. Some have drawn parallels to the runup to the Iraq War, when the Bush administra­tion’s evident desire to be given a rationale for war skewed intelligen­ce toward seeing nonexisten­t weapons of mass destructio­n.

In today’s case, analysis was skewed toward not seeing a threat — and the skew was enabled, in part, by claims that all the evidence that there was, indeed, a threat was a hoax perpetrate­d by the liberal news media.

There’s little evidence, even now, that the Trump administra­tion is taking COVID-19 seriously. While it’s finally asking for additional funds to fight the disease, the sums seem grotesquel­y inadequate.

Trump allies are already denouncing his critics for “politicizi­ng” the outbreak; Donald Trump Jr. has accused Democrats of wanting to see millions die. But it was actually Trump who politicize­d the virus, by downplayin­g the danger.

It’s true that Democrats are criticizin­g Trump’s actions, suggesting that his refusal to accept responsibi­lity for, well, anything is putting America at risk. Last time I checked, however, criticizin­g America’s leaders was still legitimate.

But that’s the thing about political paranoia: Even the most normal criticism is seen as a sinister conspiracy. The fact that it has infected our ruling party is scarier than any virus.

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