If U.S. had fought COVID like Denmark did, hundreds of thousands of Americans would be alive | Opinion

If U.S. had fought COVID like Denmark did, hundreds of thousands of Americans would be alive | Opinion

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Virtually nobody here wears a face mask on the street or inside shops and restaurants — a huge surprise. It’s almost as if the COVID-19 pandemic were a distant memory.

As soon as I left the Copenhagen airport and took a taxi to the city, the driver — who was not wearing a mask — told me that I didn’t need to wear one in Denmark. “It hasn’t been required for several months,” he said. When we entered the city, I noticed that, indeed, almost no one was wearing a mask.

In Denmark, 72% of the people have been fully vaccinated, as opposed to 51% in the United States, 31% in Argentina and 25% in Mexico. And by almost every standard, Denmark has done much better than the United States and most other countries in fighting the pandemic.

The cumulative number of COVID-19 deaths per million people in Denmark is of 442, compared with 1,904 in the United States, according to Oxford University’s Ourworldindata.org website.

In conversations with Danes from all walks of life, virtually all of them told me the same thing: Denmark has succeeded in its battle against COVID-19 because most of the population followed the advice of government officials and experts from the start.

In early 2020, when the government ordered a stringent lockdown, everybody complied. When the government asked people to get vaccinated, almost everyone did. Government officials say that most of those who didn’t get vaccinated were young people, who thought that COVID-19 posed no threat to them. Now, the government is launching a vaccination campaign in schools and colleges, aiming at a full vaccination rate of 90% of the population.

To enter the country, you need to show a negative COVID-19 test taken in the past 72 hours. Every time I went to a restaurant, I had to show proof of vaccination. But the government announced on Aug. 27 that this and all other domestic restrictions will expire on Sept. 10, because the pandemic is “under control.”

“We believe in authorities, we believe in experts,” Bertel Haarder, a member of Parliament and former education and culture minister, told me in an interview. “When experts tell us that we should get vaccinated, then the Danes have a tendency to get vaccinated.”

Gert Tinggaard Svendsen, a professor of comparative politics at Aarhus University and author of a book on trust, agrees.

“Here, people trust the government,” Svensen told me. “When the government told Danes that vaccines were good for you, people trusted the government.”

Compare this to the United States where, possible cultural differences aside, we had a president — Donald Trump — who, unlike Danish leaders, minimized the pandemic from the very start. In February 2020, when Danish officials announced they were about to order a national lockdown, Trump was saying that “It’s going to be just fine,” and “I’m not concerned at all.”

Worse, Trump didn’t set an example by wearing a mask in public, often mocked those who did and, at one point suggested that people should inject themselves with a disinfectant to fight COVID-19.

From then on, things in America only got worse. The Republican Party — with a few honorable exceptions — has abandoned common sense by following in Trump’s footsteps, fighting mask mandates and failing to actively campaign for mass vaccinations, hoping to hurt President Biden’s initially successful offensive against the virus.

That’s insane. It’s costing thousands of American lives — many more than those lost in Afghanistan, or any other war.

Let’s follow Denmark’s example. I’m not suggesting to put all our trust in our politicians, because we’ve had a bad experience with that. But we should follow what the consensus of the scientific community says: Get vaccinated, wear a mask, and keep your distance!

Don’t miss the “Oppenheimer Presenta” TV show on Sundays at 8 pm E.T. on CNN en Español. 

Is rural America becoming a new Confederacy?

Is rural America becoming a new Confederacy?

A farm.
A farm. Illustrated | iStock

 

What if the polarization of American politics and rise of right-wing populism in the Republican Party are a function of rural parts of the country becoming more like the historic South?

That is the surprising suggestion of Will Wilkinson in a fruitfully provocative Substack post. Wilkinson is something of an expert on the subject, having done important empirical work on the role of population density in driving political polarization and populist backlash. His argument, in sum: Polarization and populism are caused by urbanization and its economic, social, and political consequences, with cities growing demographically and economically, and becoming more progressive, over time, while depopulating rural areas succumb to economic decline and zero-sum, reactionary politics.

In his latest post, Wilkinson merely extends this research a few steps by observing both an increasing cultural homogenization across different rural areas, each of which used to be more distinctive, and the growing prevalence of Confederate flags far outside of the historic South, in the rural areas of northern states and states that didn’t even exist at the time of the Civil War.

So far, these are merely anecdotes, but if verified by more rigorous research they could point toward something real and important: Not just growing ideological unification across the rural areas of the country, but the drift of that ideology in the direction of the Confederacy. The point isn’t that the American countryside increasingly wants to avenge the honor of Southern slave owners for their loss in a war that ended over a century and a half ago. Rather, the people who live in these areas share with the historic South an intense distrust of the federal government, veneration of local law enforcement, resentment of city folk, suspicion of minorities and foreigners, hostility to technologically driven change, and a keen sensitivity to cultural slights.

Those are the senses in which we may be living through what Wilkinson calls the “Southernification of rural America.”

Wilkinson himself leaves unanswered both how and why this may be happening. On the question of how, I’d look at social media and its remarkable capacity to forge ideological solidarity across vast distances in the real world. Where prior to the rise of Facebook, Twitter, and Reddit, an angry resident of rural Maine would have found no political outlet for his rage beyond his own community, now he might link up online with likeminded residents of rural Mississippi and Oregon, recognizing a similar set of grievances and organizing a virtual community around them.

As for why growing numbers are gravitating toward Confederate ideas and iconography, it may be nothing more than an example of people grabbing onto what’s at hand. The South has long produced an abundant supply of populist anger and resentment. Maybe all that has changed in our time is that there is now a much larger audience and much greater demand for that poisonous political message.

2 Bipartisan Senators Demand That Biden Protect Afghan Journalists

NPR – Politics

2 Bipartisan Senators Demand That Biden Protect Afghan Journalists

Democrat Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Republican Mitt Romney of Utah are urging the Biden administration to step up work protecting Afghan journalists.Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images; Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images.

 

Two bipartisan senators — Democrat Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Republican Mitt Romney of Utah — want the Biden administration to step up their work protecting Afghan journalists in the wake of the U.S. exit from their country.

Klobuchar and Romney said that following the end of formal operations in Afghanistan, the Afghan journalists who assisted U.S. media personnel need urgent aid resettling and continuing their work.

The senators told Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in the letter that the journalists now face new, dire risks under new Taliban rule.

“There are concerns that given their long history of attacks on journalists, the Taliban will eliminate a free and open media and continue to suppress, imprison, and violently target the press,” Klobuchar and Romney wrote.

In all, the effort could target more than 200 journalists and support staff, the senators noted. Several groups, such as the Committee To Protect Journalists, have zeroed in on the concerns in the days leading up to and since the U.S. departure from Afghanistan.

The tumultuous U.S. exit from its 20-year war in Afghanistan has left a broad wave of bipartisan criticism from lawmakers worried about Americans and Afghan allies left behind. President Biden has remained firm in his defense and commitment of the plans to exit the country by Aug. 31, lauding the largest airlift in U.S. history with the evacuation of more than 120,000.

However, many say that fell woefully short considering about 100 to 200 Americans were left behind, along with a many Afghan allies who requested evacuations but remain now under new Taliban rule with uncertain futures.

Lawmakers last month called for safe evacuation of the journalists

The new letter from Klobuchar and Romney to Biden officials follows a request last month by the senators for the administration to ensure the safe evacuation of the journalists, their support staff and families. It coincided with other similar bipartisan requests from other members of Congress, such as Reps. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and Steve Chabot, R-Ohio., last month.

Klobuchar and Romney urged the administration to expand its partnerships with members of the media, the private sector, non-governmental organizations and other governments to support jobs for the Afghan journalists who can continue reporting “open and transparent news” on the country.

“Their knowledge of Afghanistan and the region is invaluable and their skills should be used to provide news not only to the people in Afghanistan but to inform those outside of the country about current events in Afghanistan,” the senators wrote.

Don’t fear Republicans. Biden voters like me owe him truth on bungled Afghanistan exit.

Don’t fear Republicans. Biden voters like me owe him truth on bungled Afghanistan exit.

A paratrooper from the 82nd Airborne Division conducts security at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Aug. 28, 2021.
A paratrooper from the 82nd Airborne Division conducts security at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Aug. 28, 2021.

 

Democrats and independents who support President Joe Biden, we need to talk. About talking.

Specifically, we need to talk about criticizing Biden, and whether doing so is harmful. Many of the president’s supporters are fearful that any negative comments about Biden just play into the hands of Republicans. As a reaction to this fear, they discourage criticism of the Biden administration, particularly on social media, which is prone to hysterical partisanship even on a good day.

This is a mistake, both as a political strategy and as a matter of civic virtue. Democrats who fear the weaponization of dissent are, in fact, playing into Republican hands. Nothing could serve the Republicans better than to have the Democrats become a mirror of the GOP. To do so is bad for Biden, for the last remaining sane major party in American politics and for the habits of democratic citizenship.

Right decision but getting lots wrong

I say this as a Biden voter who has written and commented at length about what I think is the bungled American pullout from Afghanistan. Yes, I think Biden made the right decision. Yes, I think the cowardice and craven opportunism of the Trump administration dealt Biden a bad hand. Yes, I think the pullout was likely to be messy no matter how well planned it was.

But that doesn’t mean I am also required to say I think Biden’s team did this well. I could name any number of moves I think were wrong, almost all of them emanating from a dysfunctional policy process. The president was dug in on a deadline; the State and Defense departments don’t seem to know what the other is doing; the National Security Council seems to have failed in its job to provide the president with the best range of options from the key departments; the intelligence community is bickering over who got which things wrong.

President Joe Biden in the White House on Aug. 26, 2021.
President Joe Biden in the White House on Aug. 26, 2021.

 

Even the speechwriting shop has bombed twice, sending Biden out to the podium with meandering speeches in which Biden’s writers attempted lofty rhetoric when the moment called for a resolute and sober leveling with the American people about what’s happening now and what happens next.

But these arguments, for people determined to protect Biden at all costs, are irrelevant. Their answer is that Trump was worse, that criticizing Biden undermines him at a crucial time, and that any such criticisms will be turned into ammunition in the coming electoral cycle.

Enough of this fearfulness.

First, Democrats should ignore the GOP and its carping about Biden. The Republicans have ceased to be a vessel for any kind of ideas. They are going to attack Biden because demonizing their opponents is the only card they have left to play. They have decided on minority rule, even if it means overturning elections, and if they capture the House in 2022 – which is more than possible – they will impeach Biden and figure out the reason later.

Forget about persuasion. Democrats are not going to start voting for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis or South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem because of the mess in Kabul, and Republicans were not somehow gettable voters who are going to be scared off by a foreign policy blunder. We’re too polarized for that.

The Democrats, if they wish to be a governing party, must treat the GOP the way the adults in the dining room treat the rowdy kids at the children’s table: Ignore their screaming, and limit the damage they can do to the room. Express valid concerns to the White House, ask what legislative or other remedies might help, and get on with the business of running the country.

Michael O’Hanlon: Biden’s blundered Afghanistan withdrawal requires keeping military in country

Second, governments do not improve without honest critics in their own party. A party that shouts down dissent in the name of winning elections and demands absolute fealty toward the leader is … well, that’s the modern Republican Party. The GOP has no platform, no direction, no groups within it to drive policy or do anything beyond injecting the requisite number of voters with pure rage. When internal dissent collapses, parties become little more than vehicles for extremist kooks. The Democrats are better than that.

GOP is beyond reasoned debate

Third, to avoid dissent for the sake of politics is to corrode the norms that undergird everything about the American system of government. To criticize our politicians is to ensure that they, and we, remember that they are our fellow citizens and not gods. We are accountable for our choices to elect them, and they are accountable for their decisions as stewards of the public trust. No man or woman is above this basic principle.

Finally, dissent and disagreement – conducted with honesty, candor and good faith – strengthens the habits that matter in a democracy: fairness, reason, tolerance, responsibility, understanding. Recently on this very opinion site, my friend David Rothkopf defended Biden’s handling of the Afghan operation, and I found that I agreed with him more than I disagreed, but that our differences on the subject were important and worth talking about.

Families evacuated from Kabul at Washington Dulles International Airport in Chantilly, Va., on Aug. 30, 2021. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) ORG XMIT: VAJL117
Families evacuated from Kabul at Washington Dulles International Airport in Chantilly, Va., on Aug. 30, 2021. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) ORG XMIT: VAJL117

 

This is more than just kibitzing over military operations; this is what citizenship looks like. Two people who care very much about their country are trying to find where we think we agree and where we diverge. We hope to enlighten each other and any of our fellow citizens who read our arguments.

David Rothkopf: There’s chaos and risk in Afghanistan exit, but Biden critics are getting it mostly wrong

Republicans, by contrast, are beyond hope on the issue of reasoned debate. But the rest of us can improve the public space with more argument rather than less. We do no favors to the president or to our constitutional system by living in fear of what the worst among us might do with our views; we can only control what we say, and what we think, and what we believe would be best for our nation.

If that means having discussions that make those of us in the same political boat uncomfortable, so be it. Discomfort is part of being an adult, but if we choose good faith discussions with each other instead of being paralyzed by fear of our political enemies, we can emerge from those discussions stronger, better citizens and more likely to prevail when working together for a common goal – including in an election.

Tom Nichols (@RadioFreeTom) is a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributors, a professor at the U.S. Naval War College and an instructor at the Harvard Extension School. His new book, “Our Own Worst Enemy: The Assault from within on Modern Democracy,” was published Aug. 19. All opinions are his own.

You can read diverse opinions from our Board of Contributors and other writers on the Opinion front page, on Twitter @usatodayopinion and in our daily Opinion newsletter. To respond to a column, submit a comment to letters@usatoday.com.

One evacuated and the other chose to stay. 2 south Louisiana residents share the horror of Hurricane Ida.

One evacuated and the other chose to stay. 2 south Louisiana residents share the horror of Hurricane Ida.

Marquise Francis, National Reporter & Producer      August 31, 2021

 

Amber Russo of LaPlace, La., was attending performing arts classes at Louisiana State University last Tuesday, excited to be getting her senior year of college underway. She had no idea that her world would be turned upside down less than a week later, when Hurricane Ida wreaked havoc across the state.

“It was so short notice, because it popped up out of nowhere,” Russo, 22, told Yahoo News. “I had to convince my mom at first to leave. I told her, ‘We’ve got to get the hell out of here.’ … This time last week I was going to college, having theater classes and having voice lessons, and this week none of that is happening.”

On Sunday evening — the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated New Orleans and much of the Gulf Coast — Ida made landfall in Louisiana as a Category 4 hurricane. The storm and its 150 mph winds stretched across 45 miles. It destroyed countless homes and businesses and caused so much flooding that boats replaced cars in some parishes.

The entire city of New Orleans lost power Sunday night, and it may take weeks to restore in some areas. Two people died and 10 others were injured after a rain-battered highway collapsed in George County, Miss., late Monday.

But no community suffered more destruction than LaPlace.

LaPlace, the largest city in St. John the Baptist Parish, is located along the east bank of the Mississippi River, with a population of just under 30,000 people. The majority-Black parish was in the direct path of Hurricane Ida, leaving many residents stranded.

“The streets of LaPlace looked like a raging river, all while buildings swayed from the high winds, metal ripped away from rooftops and traffic lights looked like they would fly away into Oz during the catastrophic storm,” Newsweek reported.

Residents wait to be rescued by first responders from floodwaters in LaPlace, La., on Monday.
Residents wait to be rescued by first responders from floodwaters in LaPlace, La., on Monday. (Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

 

Russo, her mom and two brothers are thankful to have gotten out of town. Now they’re more than 400 miles away from home in Hot Springs, Ark., a city they’ve never been to before, after evacuating from their home early Sunday morning. They’re staying in a rented space for now, thankful for two $50 donations they’ve received online that have helped them get by so far.

“It’s been stressful,” Russo said, adding that she’s previously been diagnosed with schizophrenia. She called the situation “scary, leaving us wondering what’s going to happen.”

The Russo family is hoping for the best when they return home this Friday, which Amber said they would do, “power or no power.” A neighbor who stayed in town told Russo that while her family’s backyard shed was destroyed, their home appears to be intact. Russo admits that many others are in a worse predicament than her family, especially those who were unable to flee Ida’s path.

All Sunday evening, Twitter users shared their addresses in desperation for help, many having to retreat into their attics as floodwaters rose 5 feet or higher in some homes. Dozens of messages, with some iteration of “Send help!” or “Help needed!” or “Urgent help!,” were shared like digital SOS alerts on social media to anyone who could offer any type of aid.

“It’s the worst that I’ve seen in the 20 years I’ve been in the parish,” Randal Gaines, a state representative who represents St. Charles and St. John the Baptist parishes, told NBC News Monday. “And we’ve seen several hurricanes.”

A first responder walks through floodwaters left by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, La., on Aug. 30, 2021.
A first responder walks through floodwaters left by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, La., on Monday. (Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

 

By Monday morning, Parish President Jaclyn Hotard told the Times-Picayune that there were no known fatalities from “one of the most catastrophic” storms to hit St. John the Baptist Parish. Nearly 800 people were rescued through Monday, according to parish officials.

“We have been tested before, and we overcame,” Hotard said. “Please continue to pray for our community and know that we have all hands and resources on deck.”

While thousands of people evacuated the southern part of Louisiana ahead of the storm, many chose to hunker down. Some did so out of stubbornness, while others stayed because they had nowhere else to go.

Jessica Bowers and her family — including her two children — decided to outlast the hurricane from inside their mobile home in LaPlace. After not evacuating during Katrina and now Ida, Bowers told NBC affiliate KPRC-TV that the family is thankful to be alive.

“Never again,” she said. “Leave, evacuate.”

For those who lived through Katrina, Ida is one big nightmare all over again. But this time the spotlight wasn’t solely on New Orleans and its challenges.

“Don’t forget it isn’t JUST New Orleans that was destroyed,” one person tweeted. “Houma. LaPlace. Franklin. Baton Rouge. And many more. … These cities need attention and help too!”

First responders rescue residents from floodwater left behind by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, Louisiana, U.S., on Monday, Aug. 30, 2021. [left] Floodwaters left behind by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, Louisiana, U.S., on Monday, Aug. 30, 2021. [right] (Photo Illustration: Yahoo! News; Photos: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images (2))

 

One of the most active people on Twitter sharing the addresses of those in need along with resources was Keva Peters Jr. of St. Rose, La. Despite riding out a “scary and nerve-racking” Sunday night in his own home, he also continued to help others.

“I’m still trying my best to help others even while dealing with my own issues, but disasters like this take the community,” Peters told Yahoo News. “I was younger for Katrina, but I do remember how bad the aftermath was.”

Since Sunday, Peters has been “taking it day by day,” as the small group he is now with is low on water and food, and has no power and limited amounts of money.

“I was in a house with six people during the storm, and we had to hunker down in the stairway,” he said. “The upstairs floors were caving in, and everything on top was going to topple over us. The eye of the storm was about 15 miles west of us. Luckily, we were able to escape to a neighbor’s house after the roof caved in.

“A lot of people are shaken up badly, including myself,” he added. “The smallest sounds make my heart drop now, after going through the storm.”

St. Rose, a community of less than 10,000 people located in the St. Charles Parish along the east bank of the Mississippi River, is currently under a curfew that lasts from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m., as first responders work to clean up the debris and assess damages in the community. Peters says that most people are without cell service, but Wi-Fi still works.

“What we’re going through isn’t unbearable, and we’re hopeful,” he said.

Patricia Henderson stands in the stairway at her home, which lost its roof during Hurricane Ida, on Tuesday in Ponchatoula, La.
Patricia Henderson stands in the stairway at her home, which lost its roof during Hurricane Ida, on Tuesday in Ponchatoula, La. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

 

The devastation of past natural disasters, including Katrina, explains why Peters has been so determined to help others. He noted that many people who rode out the hurricane had no other choice, including himself.

“My mom couldn’t evacuate, so I had to choose between evacuating or staying with her. So of course I stayed, even though our town was under mandatory evacuation,” he said. “Others had no family to go to or no money to spend on leaving. Others who left had dealt with Katrina and didn’t want to experience this again.”

Cover thumbnail photo illustration: Yahoo News; photos: Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images (2)

McCarthy threatens companies that comply with Jan. 6 probe’s phone records requests

McCarthy threatens companies that comply with Jan. 6 probe’s phone records requests

 

Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy on Tuesday threatened to use a future GOP majority to punish companies that comply with the House’s Jan. 6 investigators, warning that “a Republican majority will not forget.”

 

McCarthy called out Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for what he called “attempts to strong-arm private companies to turn over individuals’ private data.” He asserted that such a forfeiture of information would “put every American with a phone or computer in the crosshairs of a surveillance state run by Democrat politicians.”

The select panel investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection took its first step in obtaining phone records on Monday, asking an array of telecommunications companies to save records relevant to the attack — a request that could include records from some lawmakers. More than 30 companies, including Apple, AT&T and Verizon, received a request for records from April 1, 2020, to Jan. 31, 2021.

“The Select Committee is investigating the violent attack on the Capitol and attempt to overturn the results of last year’s election,” a committee spokesperson said in a statement, responding to McCarthy’s threat. “We’ve asked companies not to destroy records that may help answer questions for the American people. The committee’s efforts won’t be deterred by those who want to whitewash or cover up the events of January 6th, or obstruct our investigation.”

On the substance of McCarthy’s complaint, congressional committees have routinely used subpoena power to obtain data from private companies, including phone records, emails and other communications. The Jan. 6 committee has not identified whose communications it is seeking, but it has made clear that members of Congress are among the potential targets, which would be a departure from past practices — one that members of the panel have said they believe is warranted in this case.

The Democratic-led committee’s investigators are looking for a fuller picture of the communications between then-President Donald Trump and members of Congress during the attack. McCarthy is among the Republicans known to have spoken with Trump on Jan. 6.

Republicans have already slammed the investigation’s interest in phone records as an “authoritarian” overreach by Democrats. Though two anti-Trump Republican lawmakers, Reps. Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, sit on the select panel, most of the party voted against the committee’s creation, and GOP senators filibustered a bill that would have formed an independent commission to investigate the Capitol insurrection.

“If these companies comply with the Democrat order to turn over private information, they are in violation of federal law and subject to losing their ability to operate in the United States,” McCarthy said in Tuesday’s statement. “If companies still choose to violate federal law, a Republican majority will not forget and will stand with Americans to hold them fully accountable under the law.”

Schiff said on Tuesday that McCarthy’s threat was “premised on a falsehood.”

“He’s scared. And I think his boss is scared,” Schiff said on MSNBC. “They didn’t want this commission and this select committee to go forward. They certainly didn’t want it to go forward as it is on a bipartisan basis, and they don’t want the country to know exactly what they were involved in.

“And Kevin McCarthy lives to do whatever Trump wants. But he is trying to threaten these companies, and it shows yet again why this man, Kevin McCarthy, can never be allowed to go anywhere near the speaker’s office.”

A tale of two governors: COVID outcomes in Florida and Connecticut show that leadership matters

A tale of two governors: COVID outcomes in Florida and Connecticut show that leadership matters

Executive power is often circumscribed by complex geopolitical dynamics, volatile financial markets, disruptive new technologies, and tragic natural disasters. But key leaders still can have a profound impact—positive or negative—on millions of constituents. A comparison of Florida’s and Connecticut’s governors in their contrasting approach to the resurgence of the coronavirus reveals the consequential potential of individual leaders.

This summer, tragic public-health news was exacerbated by historic levels of political grandstanding by several Southern state governors. The rapid spread of the COVID-19 Delta variant was driven by a surge of new cases in Florida, Texas, and Missouri—as these states accounted for an astounding 40% of new U.S. coronavirus cases despite representing only 17% of the nation’s population. Ignoring science and evidence, the governors of these three states have taken a rigid, cynical stance, forbidding vaccine mandates by employers and mandatory indoor mask usage—even in cases where such mandates were intended to protect young schoolchildren ineligible for vaccines.

In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis even threatened to cut off funding and educators’ salaries for schools that required protective masks in compliance with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines. Nonetheless, 10 school districts defied DeSantis by issuing mask mandates. Similarly, Disney, Carnival Cruise Line, and Royal Caribbean joined Norwegian Cruise Line in defiance of DeSantis’s ban on passenger vaccination passports, despite being threatened with fines of $5,000 for each such violation of his decree.

Florida’s hospital emergency rooms and intensive care units are now reaching capacity, with 90% of ICU beds occupied, the majority of them by COVID patients. More than 90% of these inpatients are unvaccinated; overall only one-third of Floridians between ages 12 and 64 are vaccinated.

DeSantis’s response to such wide swaths of the unvaccinated Florida population suffering from the highly contagious Delta variant has been to consult with anti-mask advocates who promote the horse parasite drug ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, unproven elixirs, instead of scientifically developed, safe, and highly effective vaccines.

In contrast, Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont has been relying on a science-based approach from the outset of the pandemic. He pulled together globally renowned virologists, microbiologists, epidemiologists, and business leaders in March of 2020, just as the pandemic was declared, and kept such advisory panels working to solve problems by relying on science, evidence, and smart management, independent of ideology. Accordingly, he worked with both top Trump administration and later top Biden administration leaders to keep manufacturing flowing without a day’s interruption, ensuring the needed supply of protective material to open schools early. Lamont also catalyzed a new nationwide weekly meeting of the nation’s governors, favoring quiet, effective, bipartisan, cross-sector problem-solving instead of seeking the public limelight.

As Lamont recently explained, “Our reopen committee included the scientists and the big business leaders that we needed to help us, and I’ve tried to do that throughout state government—get a wider variety of people at the table.” He did not mock scientists, intimidate public officials, or threaten business leaders as foils for political grandstanding. This resulted in the nation’s highest or second highest vaccination rates for every age group, from 75% upward—including 90% of seniors—and one of the lowest COVID-19 death rates in the nation (Connecticut is 35th out of 50 by that measure).

This focused approach to problem-solving and collaborative leadership style allowed Lamont to call for vaccine mandates in schools, nursing homes, and for all state employees recently—astoundingly without protest from unions, partisan political leaders of either party, or business leaders. Lamont pointed to heat maps of Southern state infections with overflowing hospitals and declared, “Sadly, in many cases, they have hospitals in different regions who are overwhelmed or close to being overwhelmed. We’re not gonna let that happen in Connecticut, and that is not happening in Connecticut.”

Just glancing at the two contrasting CDC charts of public health outcomes for Florida versus Connecticut below—showing the impact of the same disease, in the same country, over the same time period—illustrates the difference leaders can make. Even though Connecticut was hard hit in the pre-vaccine phase of the pandemic, the post-vaccine outcomes are dramatically different. This difference is not explained by age patterns: The average age in both states is about 41 years old, but the health outcomes of Connecticut residents tower over those of Floridians in every age bracket.

Florida COVID deaths, year to date

Commentary-FL-outcomes
Florida COVID deaths

Connecticut COVID deaths, year to date

Commentary-CT-outcomes
Connecticut COVID deaths

 

Sourcehttps://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker. Note that the blue axis in the charts above is not normalized by population and the orange axis has a slightly different scale in the two charts.

As the Delta variant rages across the country, the divergence of health outcomes is especially notable between the Northeast and the South. The map below shows that the divergence between Connecticut and Florida is reflected in a wider region surrounding each state. A year and a half into the pandemic, we have accumulated a great deal of knowledge and experience in designing effective public health responses. The divergence of health outcomes across the country is the result not of differences in the prevalence of the Delta variant, population demographics, access to health care, or environmental conditions; it is attributable at this point principally to differences in leadership.

Commentary-US-heat-map
COVID heat map

 

Leadership matters. Leadership matters not only in determining the effectiveness of government’s response to the public health crisis, but in shaping both individual opinions and the sense of common purpose.

Ideological extremism has caused needless deaths in our country. It is tragic that political differences among the states have resulted in a sharp divergence with respect to health-protective behaviors—vaccination and masking among them. Ideological differences and bitter political rivalries exist in all democracies, and individual attitudes toward vaccination and masking vary widely within all regions of the world, but nowhere else are these attitudes as closely aligned with political ideologies as they have become in the U.S. The U.K., India, and Israel are just three examples: In each country, the pandemic remains a grave danger, but each country’s political cleavages, no less intractable than in the U.S., are largely unrelated to health-protective behaviors. In the U.S., the political reinforcement of resistance to public health measures has hardened individual attitudes, as shown in the chart below, worsening the pandemic and its impact on American lives and the economy.

Commentary-Vaccine-status-and-intent
vax status and intent

 

The contrasting leadership approaches between the governors of Connecticut and Florida are not explainable by educational sophistication: Each governor holds college and graduate school degrees from both Harvard and Yale. The differences are not explained by credentials but rather by competence and character. Ron DeSantis is a smart person cynically willing to play the role of an anti-intellectual for political gain, while Ned Lamont is trying to do his job to save the lives of his constituents, seeking the best scientific knowledge and evidence we have gathered on the pandemic.

As Walt Disney, one of the business leaders who shaped modern Florida, once said, “Courage is the main quality of leadership, in my opinion, no matter where it is exercised.”

Jeffrey Sonnenfeld is a senior associate dean and professor of management practice at the Yale School of Management, where he is president of the Chief Executive Leadership Institute. Anjani Jain is deputy dean for academic programs and professor in the practice of management at the Yale School of Management.

Trump Reveals His Master Plan for Afghanistan: We Should’ve ‘Let It Rot’

Trump Reveals His Master Plan for Afghanistan: We Should’ve ‘Let It Rot’

 

Donald Trump has had a lot to say about how Joe Biden has mishandled the withdrawal from Afghanistan—but, when given the chance to explain what he would have done differently, Trump’s master plan boiled down to leaving the country in smoldering ruins before leaving it forever.

The ex-president appeared on Fox Business on Tuesday morning to get some things off his chest a day after the last U.S. troops left Afghanistan. During a curious rant about how he believes unnamed shadowy forces are controlling Biden, Trump shared his alternative withdrawal plans.

“It’s something that’s rather incredible,” he said. “They [the people supposedly controlling Biden] do horrible things, vicious things. They cheat, steal, lie. But they can’t do a simple withdrawal from a country that we should never have gone into in the first place… We should have hit that country years ago, hit it them really hard, and then let it rot.”

The Nonexistent Afghanistan Plan That Might’ve Saved Biden’s Ass

The former president was repeatedly thrown softball questions about how he would’ve handled the situation if he hadn’t lost the election. However, he repeatedly failed to give any answers of substance, merely saying that he would’ve won the war in Afghanistan if only he’d had a few more months.

“He [Biden] handed them a country on a silver platter,” said Trump. “He ought to apologize and stop trying to, excuse the language, bullshit everybody into thinking that what he did was good. We should have withdrawn but we should have withdrawn in a totally different way, with great dignity. It would have been a tremendous win for us.”

Again, he didn’t elaborate on what “totally different way” would have resulted in the “tremendous win” despite being asked for details.

While Trump repeatedly tried to criticize Biden for the failings in the U.S. evacuations from Kabul, he also laid into the thousands of desperate evacuees. With zero evidence, Trump claimed Afghan evacuees who have arrived in the U.S. include “many terrorists” and “criminal rapists.”

We’re Giving Up On Afghanistan—and the Americans Still There

Needlessly linking the situation back to one of his presidential obsessions, Trump added: “The level of incompetence on this withdrawal is even far greater than the level of incompetence at the southern border.”

At the end of the interview, host Stuart Varney bizarrely threw in some questions about cryptocurrency, and Trump’s answers were equally strange. Varney asked if Trump “dabbled” in crypto, and his answers provided roughly the same level of detail that he gave when being asked for his alternative plans for the withdrawal from Afghanistan.

“I like the currency of the United States,” said Trump. “I think the others are potentially a disaster waiting to happen. I don’t know. I feel that it hurts the United States currency, we should be invested in our currency, not in… Uh… They may be fake, who knows what they are? They certainly are something that people don’t know very much about.”

FACT FOCUS: Trump, others wrong on US gear left with Taliban

FACT FOCUS: Trump, others wrong on US gear left with Taliban

 

Taliban special force fighters arrive inside the Hamid Karzai International Airport after the U.S. military’s withdrawal, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Tuesday, Aug. 31, 2021. The Taliban haven’t obtained $80 billion or more in U.S. military equipment despite claims this week from social media users and political figures including Sen. Marsha Blackburn, Rep. Lauren Boebert and former President Donald Trump. (AP Photo/Khwaja Tawfiq Sediqi).
The Taliban have seized both political power and significant U.S.-supplied firepower in their whirlwind takeover of Afghanistan, recovering guns, ammunition, helicopters and other modern military equipment from Afghan forces who surrendered it.

 

But the gear the Taliban have obtained isn’t worth the $80 billion or more being claimed this week by social media users and political figures including Sen. Marsha Blackburn, Rep. Lauren Boebert and former President Donald Trump.

While the U.S. spent $83 billion to develop and sustain Afghan security forces since 2001, most of it did not go toward equipment. Nor will the Taliban be able to use every piece of American gear that was supplied to Afghanistan over two decades.

Here’s a closer look at the facts.

CLAIM: Taliban fighters now possess U.S. military equipment worth between $80 and $85 billion.

THE FACTS: Those numbers are significantly inflated, according to reports from the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, or SIGAR, which oversees American taxpayer money spent on the conflict.

In the last days of August, as U.S. troops completed their withdrawal from Afghanistan, social media users began claiming that the “Taliban’s new arsenal” was worth as much as $85 billion. Trump amplified the falsehood in a statement Monday, writing that “ALL EQUIPMENT should be demanded to be immediately returned to the United States, and that includes every penny of the $85 billion dollars in cost.”

Their $85 billion figure resembles a number from a July 30 quarterly report from SIGAR, which outlined that the U.S. has invested about $83 billion to build, train and equip Afghan security forces since 2001.

Yet that funding included troop pay, training, operations and infrastructure along with equipment and transportation over two decades, according to SIGAR reports and Dan Grazier, a defense policy analyst at the Project on Government Oversight.

“We did spend well over $80 billion in assistance to the Afghan security forces,” Grazier said. “But that’s not all equipment costs.”

In fact, only about $18 billion of that sum went toward equipping Afghan forces between 2002 and 2018, a June 2019 SIGAR report showed.

Another estimate from a 2017 Government Accountability Office report found that about 29% of dollars spent on Afghan security forces between 2005 and 2016 funded equipment and transportation. The transportation funding included gear as well as contracted pilots and airplanes for transporting officials to meetings.

If that percentage held for the entire two-decade period, it would mean the U.S. has spent about $24 billion on equipment and transportation for Afghan forces since 2001.

But even if that were true, much of the military equipment would be obsolete after years of use, according to Grazier. Plus, American troops have previously scrapped unwanted gear and recently disabled dozens of Humvees and aircraft so they couldn’t be used again, according to Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie, head of U.S. Central Command.

Though no one knows the exact value of the U.S.-supplied Afghan equipment the Taliban have secured, defense officials have confirmed it is significant.

This is part of AP’s effort to address widely shared misinformation, including work with outside companies and organizations to add factual context to misleading content that is circulating online. Learn more about fact-checking at AP.

Aerial photos: Hurricane Ida’s devastation

Aerial photos: Hurricane Ida’s devastation

Colin Campbell and Yahoo News Staff         

 

Communities across Louisiana and Mississippi are taking stock of the damage brought by Hurricane Ida, one of the most powerful storms to ever hit the U.S. mainland.

The death toll ticked up to four on Tuesday, including two people killed Monday night when a highway collapsed in Lucedale, Miss. Highway Patrol Cpl. Cal Robertson told the Associated Press that vehicles landed on top of each other as they plunged into a hole created by the rural highway turning into a darkened pit.

In Louisiana, the entire city of New Orleans is without power due to damage inflicted on the area’s electrical grid after Ida made landfall Sunday. It may take weeks to restore power to hundreds of thousands of people there and in nearby areas.

A truck drives through the flooded streets of Indigo Estates after Hurricane Ida moved through Monday, Aug. 30, 2021, in LaPlace, La. (Steve Helber/AP Photo)
A truck drives through the flooded streets of Indigo Estates in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida on Monday in LaPlace, La. (Steve Helber/AP)

 

Rescue and repair crews continue to navigate flooded streets and buildings reduced to rubble, a product of 150 mph winds and heavy rainfall blanketing the area. Many buildings’ roofs were either destroyed or ripped off entirely. Boats are the preferred vehicles for some neighborhoods previously navigated by cars.

Sweltering conditions brought by the summer heat have added a further layer of complexity to rescue efforts. The AP reported that a heat advisory was issued for the New Orleans region, “with forecasters saying the combination of high temperatures and humidity could make it feel like 105 degrees Fahrenheit (41 degrees Celsius) on Tuesday and 106 on Wednesday.” In the many neighborhoods without electricity, air conditioners are unable to tame the heat. Many of the same areas lack refrigeration due to power outages, and still others lack running water.

Scientists say human-caused climate change is altering the makeup of storms like Hurricane Ida, with rising ocean temperatures leading to higher wind speeds, and rising air temperatures leading to more rainfall. Flash floods caused significant fatalities and devastation in Tennessee, Germany, India and China earlier this year, among other places across the globe.

A house with no roof is seen after Hurricane Ida hit Houma, Louisiana, the United States, Aug. 30, 2021. With stranded people waiting for rescue on damaged roofs, flooded roads blocked by downed trees and power lines, and over one million people without power through Monday morning, Hurricane Ida has wreaked widespread havoc since its landfall in southern U.S. state of Louisiana on Sunday. (Nick Wagner/Xinhua via Getty Images)
A house with no roof after Hurricane Ida hit Houma, La., is seen on Monday. (Nick Wagner/Xinhua via Getty Images)
In this aerial photo, RVs are flipped over in an RV park after Hurricane Ida on August 31, 2021 in Paradis, Louisiana. Ida made landfall August 29 as a Category 4 storm southwest of New Orleans, causing widespread power outages, flooding and massive damage. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
RVs flipped over in an RV park in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida on Tuesday in Paradis, La. Ida made landfall Sunday as a Category 4 storm southwest of New Orleans, causing widespread power outages, flooding and massive damage. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Homes and streets are overwhelmed by water on August 30, 2021 in Lafitte, Louisiana. (Michael Robinson Chavez/the Washington Post via Getty Images)
Homes and streets overwhelmed by water on Monday in Lafitte, La. (Michael Robinson Chavez/the Washington Post via Getty Images)
An aerial photo made with a drone shows damage caused by Hurricane Ida in La Place, Louisiana, USA, Tuesday. The Category 4 storm came ashore on 29 August causing heavy flooding, downing trees, and ripping off roofs. (Tannen Maury/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
Damage caused by Hurricane Ida is seen in LaPlace, La., on Tuesday. (Tannen Maury/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
An aerial photo made with a drone shows damage caused by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, Louisiana, USA, 31 August 2021. The Category 4 storm came ashore on 29 August causing heavy flooding, downing trees, and ripping off roofs. (Tannen Maury/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
A building damaged by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, La., on Tuesday. (Tannen Maury/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
Boats are seen lying on the earth in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, Monday, Aug. 30, 2021, in Lafitte, La. The weather died down shortly before dawn. (David J. Phillip/AP Photo)
Boats lying on land in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida on Monday in Lafitte, La. The weather died down shortly before dawn. (David J. Phillip/AP)
Roof damage is seen in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, Monday, Aug. 30, 2021, in Houma, La. (David J. Phillip/AP Photo)
Significant roof damage in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida on Monday in Houma, La. (David J. Phillip/AP)
A flooded city is seen in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, Monday, Aug. 30, 2021, in Lafitte, La. (David J. Phillip/AP Photo)
A flooded Lafitte, La., in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida on Monday. (David J. Phillip/AP)
Damge is seen in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, Monday, Aug. 30, 2021, in Houma, La. (David J. Phillip/AP Photo)
Structures flattened by Hurricane Ida in Houma, La., on Monday. (David J. Phillip/AP)
Damge is seen in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, Monday, Aug. 30, 2021, in Houma, La. (David J. Phillip/AP Photo)
Barns and buildings damaged by Hurricane Ida in Houma, La., on Monday. (David J. Phillip/AP)
The roof of an apartment building is seen torn off by Hurricane Ida in Houma, Louisiana, the United States, Aug 30, 2021. With stranded people waiting for rescue on damaged roofs, flooded roads blocked by downed trees and power lines, and over one million people without power through Monday morning, Hurricane Ida has wreaked widespread havoc since its landfall in southern U.S. state of Louisiana on Sunday. (Chine Nouvelle/SIPA/Shutterstock)
An apartment building with the roof torn off by Hurricane Ida in Houma, La., on Monday. (Chine Nouvelle/SIPA/Shutterstock)
An Airboat glides over a city street in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, Monday, Aug. 30, 2021, in Lafitte, La. (David J. Phillip/AP Photo)
An airboat glides over a city street in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida on Monday in Lafitte, La. (David J. Phillip/AP)