GOP, Fox News have waged war on science. With coronavirus, will their aging fans pay the price? | Will Bunch
“I believe in choice,” Stitt said when explaining why he not only did not inoculate his own kids -- who were home-schooled -- but would not sign a bill requiring vaccinations to attend public school in
‘Disaster socialism’: Will coronavirus crisis finally change how Americans see the safety net? | Will BunchStitt’s anti-vax extremism didn’t stop either Vice President
On Saturday night, Stitt tweeted a photo of him and two of his unvaccinated sons mugging for the camera in a crowded food hall and bragging that “it’s packed tonight! #supportlocal #OklaProud.” He later deleted the tweet amid a social media outcry, but the episode felt emblematic of a bigger phenomenon that many have noted as the coronavirus crisis escalates -- that how seriously one treats the global pandemic may depend on one’s politics.
So I know nothing about
-- Schooley (@Rschooley)
Some of the evidence is anecdotal.
This isn’t just Felber’s imagination. Pollsters are seeing something with the coronavirus crisis that they’ve not seen previously in national emergencies: A steep partisan divide in people’s concern over its seriousness. The numbers in a new
What’s up with that? Many are quick to blame America’s denier-in-chief,
(function() {
var l = function() {
new pym.Parent('2020-02-coronavirus-embed', 'https://media.inquirer.com/storage/inquirer/ai2html/2020-02-coronavirus-embed/index.html');
};
if (typeof(pym) === 'undefined') {
var h = document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0],
s = document.createElement('script');
s.type = 'text/javascript';
s.src = 'https://pym.nprapps.org/pym.v1.min.js';
s.onload = l;
h.appendChild(s);
} else {
l();
}
})();
But coronavirus may also be another case where Trumpism is a symptom of a deeper disease -- one that festers in a media petri dish where the average Republican spends his or her waking hours immersed in talk radio and outlets like the
You gotta watch this, I mean........you just gotta watch pic.twitter.com/x2ZsayVrmv
--
In the most publicized incident,
Regan may have been an extreme case, but she was also emblematic of a feedback loop between Trump and conservative media in seeking to downplay the public health threat. On
Wrote
Yet that’s hard to imagine -- because the misinformation about coronavirus from a Republican president and his state-run media isn’t an anomaly, but the culmination of a war on science, expertise and intellectualism that has been going on for more than a generation. To be sure, the anti-vax conspiracy theories of Oklahoma’s Stitt are on the extreme end of this (although just last November Fox and Friends, Trump’s favorite show, lauded actor
It's happening..."
--
Instead, consider the daily denial of climate-change science on
https://www.inquirer.com/columnists/attytood/nebraska-flooding-climate-change-republican-lawmakers-denial-green-new-deal-ocasio-cortez-20190328.htmlLate last year, a
(function() {
var l = function() {
new pym.Parent('2020-02-coronavirus-embed-headlines', 'https://media.inquirer.com/storage/inquirer/ai2html/2020-02-coronavirus-embed/headlines/index.html');
};
if (typeof(pym) === 'undefined') {
var h = document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0],
s = document.createElement('script');
s.type = 'text/javascript';
s.src = 'https://pym.nprapps.org/pym.v1.min.js';
s.onload = l;
h.appendChild(s);
} else {
l();
}
})();
That’s bad, but now here’s what worries me -- a lot -- about the response to coronavirus in this smog of misinformation. The average median age of a
Simply put, the folks who are watching
With coronavirus cases in
___
(c)2020 The Philadelphia Inquirer
Visit The Philadelphia Inquirer at www.inquirer.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Cheap Car Insurance 2020: How To Get Affordable Rates With The Help Of Usage-Based Insurance
Pro Football Retired Players Association Applauds Enhanced Pension Benefits for NFL Retirees in New CBA
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News