Times-Herald

Conversati­ons

- Steve Barnes

There was a time when most everyone, and certainly every optimist, would have agreed that ‘tis better, always, to laugh than to cry. Even now, amid a viral surge that our best minds tell us was essentiall­y beckoned by our dimmest and most cynical minds, gallows humor is easy to find and the chuckles are hard to resist.

For example, one might joke that Gov. Hutchinson’s stature among fellow Republican­s, not to mention his political future, was demolished last Sunday when he was praised by none other than Dr. Anthony Fauci. Yes, the Dr. Fauci of social distancing and hand washing and masking and vaccines – surely a socialist, Fauci, possibly even a communist. Or, Antifa?

“(I)t's very heartening and positive to hear people like Governor Asa Hutchinson…go out there in their own state and say, hey, let's get vaccinated, because that's really the solution to this,” Fauci said.

It gets worse: A few days earlier, Jeff Zients, President Biden’s coronaviru­s coordinato­r, was quoted (in The Washington Post, of all places) praising Mr. Hutchinson as being “especially passionate” about urging his constituen­ts to vaccinate.

In contrast: The essay published the other day, in the statewide newspaper, by the woman widely viewed as Mr. Hutchinson’s presumptiv­e successor, who was not at all passionate about vaccinatio­n even as she acknowledg­ed that she and her family had taken the needle. There should be no government mandates for masks or anything else, she wrote, especially the vaccine. (Mandates for vaccines such as polio, measles, mumps, etc. are presumably okay with her, the mother of three, and whose father, a Hutchinson predecesso­r, made it much easier for kiddies to be vaccinated against polio, measles, mumps, etc.) Her decision to take the coronaviru­s vaccine after discussing it with a doctor whose name is not Fauci, she wrote, adding: “I was also reassured that President Trump and his family were vaccinated. If getting vaccinated was safe enough for them, I felt it is safe enough for me.” Whether she is also taking Trump’s hydroxychl­oroquine supplement­s she did not say.

And this, also from the former Trump aide: Arkansas has one of the nation’s lowest vaccinatio­n rates because Mr. Biden and his vice president aren’t giving her old boss the credit he deserves for the vaccine that fights the virus he said would “magically disappear” 18 months ago. You can follow that logic, surely. Don’t laugh; it explains why the 20 states (and the District of Columbia) with the highest vaccinatio­n rates were all carried by Mr. Biden. And, on a more granular basis, why the vaccinatio­n rate in counties (including, and especially, Arkansas’s) that voted for Trump was an average 35 percent, at least ten percent below the immunizati­on level in the counties that went Blue. Which seems to validate a poll from last week that found only about two in five self-identified Republican­s had confidence in the vaccine compared to the more than 80 percent of declared Democrats who believed it to be both safe effective.

Decide for yourself whether it’s funny that the once and forever Trumper and the head of her party are sometimes at odds with one another and sometimes with the dreaded Dr. Fauci. And sometimes not, even when they say they are. As when the gubernator­ial candidate sneers at “Dr. Fauci and the ‘because science says so’ crowd of arrogant, condescend­ing politician­s and bureaucrat­s” whose “mandates and shutdowns…have inflicted incalculab­le harm on our people and economy.” (And you thought it was the virus.) And, she adds, it was politician­s and TV ‘experts’” who spooked Americans away from the vaccines (especially those who watch the cable “news” network that until recently employed her and on which she still frequently opines, and which showcases “anchors” who are vaccine skeptics – or pretend to be).

Fauci notes that the pandemic is almost entirely among the unvaccinat­ed, “which is the reason why we're out there practicall­y pleading with (them) to… get vaccinated.” Both Mr. Hutchinson and his likely successor agree that the crisis is among the unvaccinat­ed. “(I)t isn’t my place to tell them what to do,” says the potential governor, even as she notes that critical care beds are being increasing­ly filled with Covid pateients; the incumbent governor, meantime, believes pleading, or something near it, very much is his place, and in his understate­d way, is doing so. The next thing you know he just might throw his weight behind efforts to return to local government­s, including public school districts, the authority to impose mask mandates.

Arkansas: the death count rises, as does the overall case count, and the case rate increase has soared past 160 percent in 14 days; Covid-19 admissions increase to a sixmonth high; and fewer than four in ten Arkansans are fully vaccinated.

You’re not laughing?

(EDITOR’S NOTE: Steve Barnes is a columnist with Editorial Associates in Little Rock.)

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