Albuquerque Journal

Anti-vax hysteria on right certainly not pro-life

- JONAH GOLDBERG The Dispatch and The Remnant podcast. Twitter @ JonahDispa­tch.

On a recent flight from Texas to North Carolina, a woman came so unglued that she tried to open the plane’s door. The flight crew had to bind and gag her with duct tape. This was an extreme example of a disturbing trend in air travel: People are becoming unruly or even hysterical.

I think this phenomenon is attributab­le to the mental health toll of the pandemic. And it’s not just affecting air travel. I think it’s contributi­ng to spikes in road rage, crime and crazy politics.

Which brings me to the reaction to President Biden’s comments earlier this month. He explained we’ve moved out of the wholesale approach to vaccinatio­n — mass vaccinatio­n centers — and must try retail.

“Now we need to go to community by community, neighborho­od by neighborho­od, and oftentimes, door to door — literally knocking on doors — to get help to the remaining people,” Biden said.

This triggered a geyser of paranoia and asininity from much of the right. Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., said this amounted to “illegal” intrusions into American privacy. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, called it a “gross abuse of power,” adding: “Nowhere in the Constituti­on does it say, ‘The federal government shall go door to door pushing Americans into vaccine trials.’”

And these were the sober critics. Even after the White House explained that federal workers would not be enlisted for this effort, Rep. Madison Cawthorn, R-N.C., warned this could lay the groundwork to “go door to door and take your guns. They could go door-to-door and take your Bibles.”

Now that would be unconstitu­tional. But going to extraordin­ary lengths to fight a pandemic isn’t. In 1796, Congress passed “An Act Relative to Quarantine,” authorizin­g the president “to direct the revenue-officers and the officers commanding forts ... to aid in the execution of quarantine and in the execution of the health laws of the states.”

The president was George Washington, a man with some passing knowledge of the Constituti­on.

But you don’t have to go back centuries to understand that federal action is neither illegal nor unconstitu­tional. Helping localities promote vaccinatio­n was part of the March COVID-19 relief package, and such efforts have been underway since April.

Besides, what’s wrong with going door to door to inform people where, how and why they should get vaccinated?

People go door to door all the time. The Census Bureau does it — and that is in the Constituti­on. Political campaigns do it, as do churches, charities and activist groups. Supporting local efforts to promote vaccinatio­n is a perfectly reasonable response to an ongoing pandemic — with new strains popping up — that has cost America more than 600,000 lives and trillions of dollars. You can just say, “Not interested.”

I’m not arguing for the feds to knock on doors to promote getting vaccinated — especially now that the right has primed people to be outraged by it. But the hysteria is embarrassi­ng.

It’s also bewilderin­g. When Donald Trump was president, Operation Warp Speed was an own-the-libs triumph. On Nov. 20, Laura Ingraham of Fox News said: “The stunning success of President Trump’s Operation Warp Speed caught team apocalypse totally off guard. Don’t you love it?”

Now, Ingraham and many other rightwing media figures are engaged in fearmonger­ing over the alleged dangers of a vaccine we wouldn’t have were it not for Trump.

At the recent Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Dallas, profession­al gadfly Alex Berenson said the Biden administra­tion was “hoping they could sort of sucker 90% of the population into getting vaccinated, and it isn’t happening” — and the crowd cheered.

At a time when COVID-19 is spiking among the unvaccinat­ed and 99.5% of COVID deaths are among this group, this is depraved. It’s certainly not pro-life.

But as bad as all this is, it would be a mistake to think this is purely a right-wing problem. When Trump was in office, antivax sentiment was high among Democrats, including then-Sen. Kamala Harris and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Biden himself raised doubts about a Trump vaccine in a debate. Trump shot back: “You don’t trust Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer?”

After Biden won, vaccine paranoia became largely a right-wing phenomenon — which Trump, who is vaccinated, refuses to push back on. Of course, there’s plenty of other paranoia and hysteria on the left these days, including about the alleged resurgence of Jim Crow. But at least that paranoia isn’t getting people killed.

For the anti-vaccine right, it’s as if Biden were the pilot of a plane and they would rather open the door and bail midflight if the alternativ­e is being a “sucker” by landing safely.

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