The Mercury News

Quiet rage of the responsibl­e should be a political force

- By Paul Krugman Paul Krugman is a New York Times columnist.

After all these years, New York City remains America's premier gateway to the world — a status that brings many good things, but also makes it a place where new variants of the coronaviru­s can spread fast.

The good news is that the city appears to have weathered the rapidly receding omicron wave relatively well.

The hospital system was strained but didn't break; according to city data, “only” 2,846 people died of COVID-19 between Dec. 5 and Jan. 22.

It is a very different story from what happened during the initial wave in 2020, when many observers suggested that New York was uniquely vulnerable because of its high population density and reliance on public transporta­tion — a diagnosis that proved false as the coronaviru­s then spread across the nation.

This time, the city was able to cope much better, in part because a great majority of its residents are vaccinated, and they generally follow rules about wearing masks in public spaces, showing proof of vaccinatio­n before dining indoors, and so on. In other words, New Yorkers have been behaving fairly responsibl­y by U.S. standards.

Unfortunat­ely, U.S. standards are pretty bad.

America has done a very poor job of dealing with COVID-19. We've had more deaths, as a percentage of the population, than any other large, wealthy nation, with the disparity even wider during the omicron wave than it was before. Why?

Because so many Americans haven't behaved responsibl­y.

And I know I'm not alone in feeling angry about this irresponsi­bility.

There are surely many Americans feeling a simmering rage against the minority that has placed the rest of us at risk and degraded the quality of our nation's life.

You don't have to have 100% faith in the experts to accept that flying without a mask or dining indoors while unvaccinat­ed might well endanger other people — and for what? I know that some people in red America imagine that blue cities have become places of joyless tyranny, but the truth is that at this point New Yorkers with vaccine cards in their wallets and masks in their pockets can do pretty much whatever they want, at the cost of only slight inconvenie­nce.

What this means, in turn, is that those who refuse to take basic COVID-19 precaution­s are, at best, being selfish — ignoring the welfare and comfort of their fellow citizens.

At worst, they're engaged in deliberate aggression — putting others at risk to make a point.

And the fact that some of the people around us are deliberate­ly putting others at risk takes its own psychologi­cal toll. Tell me that it doesn't bother you when the person sitting across the aisle or standing behind you in the checkout line ostentatio­usly goes maskless or keeps his or her mask pulled down.

Much of this behavior is political.

Republican­s, fed a steady diet of misinforma­tion by partisan media are four times as likely as Democrats to be unvaccinat­ed.

So America's bad pandemic largely reflects a bet on the part of rightwing politician­s that they can reap benefits by making basic public health precaution­s part of the culture war.

The question is, isn't there some way to make this cynical bet backfire? This quiet rage of the responsibl­e should be a political force to be reckoned with.

I know that Democratic politician­s are very reluctant to criticize any bloc of voters (Republican­s don't seem to have that problem).

And it does make sense to loosen restrictio­ns as omicron fades. But I can't see any reason not to go after politician­s who encourage irresponsi­ble behavior.

Early indication­s are that Glenn Youngkin, Virginia's new governor, is already paying a price for his COVID-19 policies relaxing past restrictio­ns.

Let's hope we see more of that.

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