Spangle: The Buck Has To Stop Somewhere

On February 26, 2020, there were 56 cases of confirmed COVID-19 in the United States. That was the day that Donald Trump said we were “going down and not up” in cases because he was in denial. We are now over 80,000 cases as of today, and it is much, much higher than that due to a lack of testing.

The obvious reactionary comment is “there wasn’t testing.” Who was in charge of testing? What administration and agencies had taken control of building testing? Had Donald Trump taken this more seriously in January when he was briefed on it, we could have avoided quarantines. (Donald Trump famously does not read intelligence briefings.)

Sheltering in place was necessary because the FCA and CDC didn’t allow private labs to act faster. Other countries did it the right way sooner. They had a lot of tests, traced back connections with the sick and quarantined them, and masks were worn across the country. We didn’t do that. America and its government took this seriously too late. It took Tucker Carlson for Trump to take it seriously, and let’s be honest, Joe Rogan for the rest of us to care.

Conservatives and MAGA nation are the ones morphing from “it is a hoax” to “this is just hype” to “it is hurting the economy.” Don’t think the rest of us don’t notice your shifting concerns. The truth is that the buck has to stop somewhere, and Trump supporters never seem to realize their President IS the government and DOES have power and responsibility. If you’re upset that the economy has been “destroyed” by shelter-in-place, then put the blame where it belongs before giving an individual or an institution more power.

Here is my homework:

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Chris Spangle is the host of the Chris Spangle Show, History of Modern Politics, and Liberty Explained, podcasts on the We Are Libertarians Podcast Network. He is also the co-host of the Patdown podcast, a comedy podcast with comedians Ms. Pat and Deon Curry. Chris Spangle has been podcasting since 2007, and now teaches podcasting at PodcastingAndPlatforms.com. He also hosts the public affairs radio show “We Thought You Might Like To Know...” on Indiana radio stations which focuses on nonprofits.

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