PRESIDENT SAID: “COVID 19, “CAME OUT OF NOWHERE!”, HE WAS SO WRONG
…A coronavirus victim
being moved to a hospital in Boston.
Just another example
of why the president is unqualified for his job
“CAME OUT OF NOWHERE,” That was President Trump on March 6 of
the coronavirus pandemic. He added: “I just
think this is something . . . that you can never really think is going to happen.”
A few weeks later, he
was again wrong, “I would view it as something that just surprised the whole
world. Nobody knew there
would be a pandemic or epidemic of this proportion.”
A global pandemic is
what it became. As usual, the president
had again blew it.
Yes, the experts have
predicted it, warned about the preparedness gaps and urged action.
That has occurred over this past year, gain and again and again.
Just look at 2019. In
January, the U.S. intelligence community issued a global threat assessment. It declared, “We
assess that the United States and the world will remain vulnerable to the next pandemic or
large-scale outbreak of a contagious disease that could lead to massive rates
of death and disability. This would severely affect the world economy,
strain international resources, and increase calls on
the United States for support. The growing proximity of humans and animals has increased the risk
of disease transmission. The number of outbreaks has increased in part because pathogens
originally found in animals have spread to the human populations.
“Came out of nowhere?”
In September, the Johns
Hopkins Center for Health Security issued a report titled:
“Preparedness for a
High-Impact Respiratory Pathogen Pandemic.” The report found that
if such a pathogen emerged, “it would likely
have significant public health, economic, social, and political consequences.
. . .The combined
possibilities of short incubation periods and asymptomatic spread can result in very small windows
for interrupting transmission, making such an outbreak difficult to contain.”
The report pointed to “large
national and international readiness gaps.”
“Came out of nowhere?” Not exactly.
In October, the Nuclear
Threat Initiative, working with the Johns Hopkins center and the
Economist Intelligence
Unit, published its
latest Global Health Security Index, examining open-source information about the
state of health security across 195 nations, and scoring them.
The report warned, “No
country is fully prepared for epidemics or pandemics, and every country has
important gaps to address.”
The report found that: “Fewer than 5% of
countries scored in the highest tier for their ability to rapidly respond to and
mitigate the spread of an epidemic.”
In November, the Center
for Strategic and International Studies published a study by its
Commission on
Strengthening America’s Health Security. It warned, “The American people are far from safe. To the contrary, the
United States remains woefully ill-prepared to respond to global health
security threats. This kind of
vulnerability should not be acceptable to anyone. At the extreme, it is a
matter of life and death. Outbreaks proliferate
that can spread swiftly across the globe and become pandemics, disrupting supply
chains, trade, transport, and ultimately entire societies and economies.”
The report
recommended: “Restore health security leadership at the White House National
Security Council.”
“Came out of nowhere?”
Not even close.
The question that must
be addressed in future postmortems is: “Why all this expertise and warning
was ignored?”
Copyright G. Ater 2020
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