Los Angeles Times

After the pandemic

- Re “Living with coronaviru­s,” editorial, March 13

While we are entering a period of extreme individual and societal hardship due to COVID-19, I am hopeful that this crisis will be a net positive for the future health of individual­s and the planet.

On the individual level, if more of us develop a habit of frequent hand washing and not shaking hands, the incidence of colds and flu will be reduced. Further, when a vaccine is developed to counter this coronaviru­s, it will remind people that immunizati­on against influenza viruses is already available and effective.

On the macro level, the slow response of the federal government will likely prompt the restoratio­n of funding to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the reestablis­hment of the National Security Council Directorat­e for Global Health Security and Biodefense.

Hopefully, this pandemic will also point out the need for a much more robust infrastruc­ture of public health, optimally grounded in a single-payer financing system.

Finally, we may realize that much of the long-distance travel we do for in-person meetings is not essential, which would be a great step toward reducing carbon emissions. Gerald Gollin, M.D. Solana Beach

While I firmly believe that Trump is dangerousl­y malevolent, I am equally dismayed by the 40-year evolution of Republican “leadership” aimed at starving our government.

President Reagan proudly stated in his first inaugural address that “government is the problem.” Before he was speaker of the House, former Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) handing out copies of Ayn Rand’s novels. Steve Bannon, Trump’s former chief political strategist, famously called for the “deconstruc­tion of the administra­tive state.”

Trump has tried to cut the budgets of the CDC and the National Institutes of Health, and he has failed to fill the position of the White House official responsibl­e for coordinati­ng our response to a pandemic.

Nov. 3 cannot come too soon. Ken Dusick Los Angeles

Don’t panic. Yes, there is a threat, but panicking just increases stress.

Pandemics have been around for all of human history. There was the Black Death, the sweating disease, the 1918 influenza pandemic and more. Yes, millions died, but these were in eras without any of the medical assistance we have today.

We are Americans. We have survived wars, the Great Depression and 9/11. We have persevered in every instance.

This plague will end too. We just need to have patience, hope and common sense. Marianne Bobick Long Beach

 ?? Jim Watson AFP/Getty Images ?? AT A NEWS conference Friday, President Trump declared a COVID-19 national emergency.
Jim Watson AFP/Getty Images AT A NEWS conference Friday, President Trump declared a COVID-19 national emergency.

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