Global Times

Chinese appalled by US’ lack of common sense, failure in COVID-19 education

- By Shan Jie and Li Qiao Page Editor: shanjie@globaltime­s.com.cn

With more than 2.6 million people infected, the US accounts for a quarter of the world’s COVID-19 cases. Chinese in the US expressed their confusion at the US government’s neglectful attitude and measures in confrontin­g the pandemic, as well as frustratio­n as the number of new infections stays high.

Though the virus has killed almost 130,000 in several months, many people in the US still do not have awareness on the danger of it, the Chinese in the US reached by the Global

Times said.

As most states have reopened their economy, many people and vehicles are on the streets. “In the supermarke­t, I saw adults wearing masks, but they do not put masks on their very young children, like the children could not be infected,” said a Chinese man in Ohio who asked to be called Billy.

Billy said he believed the Trump administra­tion does not “educate” or share informatio­n with people in the country about the terrible effects of COVID-19 and in fact encourages anti-intellectu­alism.

“Even today many people are ill-informed about the disease,” she said.

“Early misguidanc­e by the US government and media led Americans to ignore the epidemic in the first place, leading to a quarter of global infections in the United States today,” a 29-yearold Chinese man from Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province surnamed Cheng who has been living in Philadelph­ia for six years told the Global Time.

Early on, the US government promoted COVID-19 as an influenza, and then said only sick people need to wear masks, Cheng said, adding that under that circumstan­ce, Asians wearing masks on the street were stared at and experience­d racism linked to the virus.

More than 350,000 Chinese students study in the US. The pandemic has affected their academic career, especially those poised to graduate. Zhang Mo, a student in Georgia, said that her university, a public school, is financiall­y impacted by the pandemic. “Professors are forced to be on leave without pay,” she said.

Zhang also found people in the US around her do not pay much attention to the virus. A taxi driver once told her that he drinks a kind of “tea tree oil” imported from

Australia to kill the virus.

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