The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Columnists share their thoughts

- Michael Reagan

Find out what people have to say about local and national issues.

It’s lucky I’m being such a good American and sheltering at home. Every day I’ve been able to watch President Trump’s coronaviru­s White House press briefings and the press conference­s of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and California Gov. Gavin Newsom. It’s been tough keeping up with all the scientific, financial and political twists and turns of our national war on the coronaviru­s. On Monday, I was ready to dump all my stocks and start hoarding cash when I heard prediction­s of 37 million unemployed and concerns about the coming of another Great Depression. But I calmed down after watching the president and his medical experts at their Tuesday press conference. There were a lot of crazy charts with curves and coronaviru­s numbers flying around. And to be honest, I’m not sure I remember exactly what Dr. Fauci and Dr. Birx said, other than that the latest realtime data on the virus shows the U.S. death toll will be much lower than originally projected by the doomsayers – between 100,000 and 200,000, maybe even lower. That good news for our spooked and shut-down country did little to reduce the number of gotcha questions from the liberal media rats in the White House press room, who spend most of their time trying to trip up Trump. It’s fine for journalist­s to be critical, probing and even adversaria­l. That’s their job. And nobody expects the liberal media to applaud Trump for little miracles, like slashing bureaucrat­ic red tape at the FDA or getting private companies like GM and Libby to quickly crank out stockpiles of ventilator­s and instant COVID-19 test kits. But unless you’re hopelessly blinded by “Trump derangemen­t syndrome,” as too many liberal journalist­s still are, you have to admit that President Trump has become a pretty good “war general.” He’s made several huge strategic decisions, unleashed trillions of federal dollars, put together important public-private partnershi­ps, delegated lots of power to governors and surrounded himself with some of the best medical and health experts in the country. In fact, if you ask me, we’re lucky we have Trump as president. He’s a lifelong businessma­n – not a lifelong politician – and he acts that way, thank God, for good and bad… but mostly good. Can you imagine if an aging swamp creature like Hillary Clinton or Joe Biden were our president right now? Hillary would have appointed Bill head of the Coronaviru­s Task Force in February and he’d still be out in Las Vegas interviewi­ng show girls for his staff. OK, that might be a little unfair to what’s left of Clinton Inc. But can anyone imagine President Joe Biden as our coronaviru­s-killer-in-chief? Before he took any action, to appease the Aoc-sanders wing of his party, Biden would form an ethnically diverse, politicall­y correct and perfectly color-balanced 35-person commission composed of union bosses, Yale law professors, illegal immigrants, Nation magazine editorial writers and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Scarboroug­h. Then before the commission did anything, it’d take two months to decide if it was really fair of us to blame the global spread of the coronaviru­s on the lies and secrecy of China’s communist government without more proof from the World Health Organizati­on. Seriously, though. Nobody saw this new coronaviru­s pandemic coming in time. Not President Trump. Not the CDC. Not Dr. Fauci. Not Dr. Pelosi. Not even the brilliant Dr. Rachel Maddow. Shutting down the country so quickly and tightly may turn out to have been a gigantic blunder caused by a perfect storm of bad data, bad modeling, bad journalism, bad politics and bad decision-making by the people in charge. But it’s too late to turn back the clock. We did what we did and now we’ll have to pay the steep price. But if your state doesn’t have enough ventilator­s and masks, it’s not Trump’s fault. It isn’t the federal government’s fault, either. Or your state’s fault. Or Gov. Cuomo’s fault. No one was ready for this pandemic, so let’s quit pointing fingers. And another thing. Until this nightmare ends, which I hope is very soon, please don’t just shelter in your home. Shelter in your own state.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States