Loveland Reporter-Herald

Pittsburgh Post-gazette on the fading COVID crisis:

-

The pandemic is almost over — we think. Not as a medical fact. COVID-19 will be around forever, just like the cold and the flu, but it no longer dominates our daily lives and politics. The Democrats’ mild reaction to last week’s court decision against mask mandates are among the many signs the American people are moving on.

On April 18, a judge in a federal district court ruled the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) lacked the authority to impose its travel mask mandate, which covers planes, trains and mass transit . ...

Some commentato­rs squawked, but significan­tly, the Biden administra­tion wavered. Even after announcing, after a multiday delay, that the Justice Department would appeal the ruling, the administra­tion has thus far declined to seek a stay of the district court decision, which would bring back the mandate immediatel­y. It’s clear Biden’s team does not want to resurrect it.

Some of that is politics. Democratic candidates don’t want to run against Republican­s who can exploit voters’ mask-fatigue . ...

The developmen­t of vaccines and other medical treatments, and the ability of people to calculate risks to protect themselves and others, also have undermined COVID-19’S dominance in our public life.

So does the American people’s craving for normality . ... More and more Americans are starting to live as they did before COVID-19.

Barring a new and very dangerous variant, the pandemic is no longer an overriding crisis. This gives us time to think about the ways we can protect the public against disease without weakening or even destroying crucial aspects of American life. Americans have experience­d the destructiv­e cost and the inequity of lockdowns. They have witnessed small businesses lost forever because the state forced them to close, while allowing big chains to stay open.

They have also witnessed the dangerous limitation­s of the creed of go-italone individual­ism.

The government — and the people themselves — made many mistakes that need to be acknowledg­ed, and not repeated, when the next pandemic hits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States