Los Angeles Times

Still angry, but angry in a hopeful way

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If you’re anything like me, you’ve been checking the Twitter account of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health every afternoon since last year for the daily count of new COVID-19 cases, new deaths and hospitaliz­ations, despairing over the slightest uptick in numbers and celebratin­g the declines. Lately, there has been hardly any despairing and plenty of hope. To say that we’ve come a long way doesn’t do justice to our collective achievemen­t as Angelenos — consider that precisely four months ago, on Jan. 8, the county reported 18,313 new daily cases, 318 deaths and more than 8,000 hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients. This week, we had back-to-back days of zero new deaths.

This is public-facing informatio­n, available to everyone. What isn’t available to everyone is the steady stream of letters, most of which go unpublishe­d, from readers who have been living with stay-home orders, home-schooling and various restrictio­ns for more than a year.

Consequent­ly, for the last year I have been reading letters expressing mostly a range of bleak opinions — from at best resignatio­n to, more often, anger, anxiety and fear. Seniors especially have written movingly of their prolonged isolation since March 2020; spouses and others with family who have died during the pandemic have written about their grief and, remarkably, persistenc­e.

Now, there is less of that, with cases and deaths hitting new lows and still declining. There’s anger, but it’s over, say, people refusing vaccinatio­n and slowing recovery, not the impending collapse of our healthcare system. That’s progress, and for now I’ll take it.

— Paul Thornton, letters editor

While the growing share of the population who have been vaccinated has steadily reduced COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations and deaths, this is also encouragin­g vaccine-hesitant individual­s by giving them one more reason not to be vaccinated — the false conclusion that the pandemic is behind us.

Epidemiolo­gists point out that if we do not reach herd immunity, COVID will continue to smolder indefinite­ly among the unprotecte­d share of the population, and this may permit new virus strains to develop that will be capable of causing serious illness and death even in those who have been fully vaccinated.

What if The Times published a daily scorecard prominentl­y on its front page? It should state something to the effect of:

“Yesterday in California 67 people died from COVID. They might be alive today if they had received one of the vaccines.”

Of course this would be even more impactful if other print and broadcast media participat­ed.

Cyril Barnert

Los Angeles

What a tragedy that we probably won’t reach “herd immunity.”

We should all reach out to our loved ones, colleagues and acquaintan­ces to encourage them to get vaccinated. The alternativ­e to herd immunity is a constant threat of infection and having to permanentl­y wear masks and avoid crowds.

And we need to make a concerted effort to deny the satisfacti­on of the “antivaxxer­s,” the foremost of whom is arguably Fox News’ Tucker Carlson. He can single-handedly condemn us to the purgatory of an arrested economy that costs lives, jobs, prosperity and the joy of living. Recently he went on a harangue of misinforma­tion and fearmonger­ing about the vaccine.

Get vaccinated for yourself, your family and society — or, do it to reject Tucker Carlson.

Richard Morse

Jonesborou­gh, Tenn.

It is sad but probably true that we will not reach herd immunity, with vaccine hesitancy especially among Republican­s. GOP leaders did next to nothing to stop the pandemic, and now this

is happening.

The Republican­s are single-handedly deterring our ability to create herd immunity against this virus.

Recently, I read a suggestion that we should try shunning those who are not vaccinated. Think about what we would have to do to ourselves to do that. But this is what the Republican­s are doing to this country, aren’t they?

Now, we need to think: When we vote, do we want to reward these malcontent­s?

Lyla Wickstrum

Sacramento

I take issue with the term “herd immunity.” It has been uttered by more learned, more important people than I, yet I cringe every time one of them applies it to people.

Herd immunity relates to herds — herds of elephants, herds of antelope, herds of elk, herds of buffalo. You get the gist.

Herds of animals do travel. They move great distances to forage, to migrate to milder climates, but they move within their herds. They don’t get on planes, trains, boats or cars to scatter to all points of the Earth, mingling with other herds. They remain within their herd.

We humans are, however, gifted with the ability of individual choice. Unfortunat­ely we are also gifted with entitlemen­t and complacenc­y.

I tell anyone willing to listen that vaccines have changed our world for the good. The uninformed are casual in their reluctance or refusal to roll up their sleeve.

Unfortunat­ely some of the diseases eradicated by vaccines are making a comeback. People scatter from one continent to another, often carrying within them an unseen disease. They are not part of a herd.

So please, let’s stop talking about herd immunity. Let’s get busy convincing people that because they aren’t herds of animals migrating in mass numbers, they have an obligation to their fellow human to protect and to be protected.

Thea Bernstein

Studio City

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? A NURSE prepares to administer a COVID-19 vaccine at a senior living community in Lakewood.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times A NURSE prepares to administer a COVID-19 vaccine at a senior living community in Lakewood.

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