Times Standard (Eureka)

Economy can be resurrecte­d; the dead can’t

- Negin Owliaei Negin Owliaei is a researcher and co-editor of Inequality. org at the Institute for Policy Studies. This op-ed was distribute­d by OtherWords.org.

Every morning for the last two months, I’ve checked the news in my home state of Florida with growing concern.

First came the photos of unemployed people lining up to file for benefits in person, denied access to an overburden­ed system. Then came the news that only a tiny percentage of unemployme­nt claims were paid out by late April.

Now, barber shops and nail salons are reopening, even as the state saw its deadliest week yet. Altogether, the news paints a horrifying picture of a government cruelly uninterest­ed in protecting human life.

The overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans continue to support social distancing and stay at home orders. But right-wing forces across the country are demanding an end to life-saving lockdowns, cheered on by a White House well aware of how devastatin­g the loss of life could be.

The government estimates a death count as high as 3,000 people a day. Despite those horrifying numbers, some states are encouragin­g employers to report workers who are afraid that returning to their jobs could amount to a death sentence, kicking them off unemployme­nt.

As other countries have shown with far more grace, the alternativ­e isn’t shutting down forever — it’s investing in testing and social safety nets.

Senegal, which has 50 ventilator­s for its population of 16 million, is building more through 3D printing, all while it trials a $1 testing kit. The world took note of South Korea’s quick and vigorous testing system.

Countries across Europe have relied on existing social safety nets to prevent the mass layoffs we’ve seen here in the U.S.

Ghanaian President Nana Akufo-Addo provided necessary perspectiv­e: “We know how to bring the economy back to life,” he said. “What we do not know is how to bring people back to life.”

By contrast, the Trump administra­tion’s callousnes­s has become more evident than ever.

Experts have been sidelined in favor of fumbling volunteers from private equity and venture capital firms, who botched the procuremen­t of medical supplies. And when Trump finally invoked the Defense Production Act, it was to force meatpackin­g workers — who are mostly Latinx and Black — to work through unsafe conditions at the very plants that have emerged as outbreak hotspots.

Indeed, those demographi­cs may help explain the government’s willingnes­s to risk lives.

It seems like no coincidenc­e that the far-right pushback became stronger as evidence mounted showing the virus disproport­ionately killing already marginaliz­ed people of color, especially black Americans. And it was hard to miss the Nazi slogan prominentl­y displayed at a “re-open” protest in Illinois, or the Confederat­e flags featured as far north as Wisconsin.

Every level of the U.S. government has shown, time and again, that the default setting is to leave the vulnerable behind. But Americans themselves are challengin­g that approach.

The wealthy may be fine with sacrificin­g the vulnerable. But workers understand the sanctity of human life, and will fight for it.

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